Migratory flyway and geographical distance are barriers to the gene flow of influenza virus among North American birds |
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Authors: | Lam Tommy Tsan-Yuk Ip Hon S Ghedin Elodie Wentworth David E Halpin Rebecca A Stockwell Timothy B Spiro David J Dusek Robert J Bortner James B Hoskins Jenny Bales Bradley D Yparraguirre Dan R Holmes Edward C |
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Affiliation: | Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Department of Biology, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA. |
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Abstract: | Despite the importance of migratory birds in the ecology and evolution of avian influenza virus (AIV), there is a lack of information on the patterns of AIV spread at the intra-continental scale. We applied a variety of statistical phylogeographic techniques to a plethora of viral genome sequence data to determine the strength, pattern and determinants of gene flow in AIV sampled from wild birds in North America. These analyses revealed a clear isolation-by-distance of AIV among sampling localities. In addition, we show that phylogeographic models incorporating information on the avian flyway of sampling proved a better fit to the observed sequence data than those specifying homogeneous or random rates of gene flow among localities. In sum, these data strongly suggest that the intra-continental spread of AIV by migratory birds is subject to major ecological barriers, including spatial distance and avian flyway. |
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Keywords: | Avian influenza ecological barriers evolution flyways gene flow phylogeography spatial distance |
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