High prevalence of Zika virus infection in populations of Aedes aegypti from South-western Ecuador.

Journal Information

Full Title: PLoS Negl Trop Dis

Abbreviation: PLoS Negl Trop Dis

Country: Unknown

Publisher: Unknown

Language: N/A

Publication Details

Subject Category: Tropical Medicine

Available in Europe PMC: Yes

Available in PMC: Yes

PDF Available: No

Transparency Score
4/6
66.7% Transparent
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Evidence found in paper:

"a sub-set of the partial zikv sequences obtained were deposited in genbank ( www ncbi nlm nih gov/genbank/ ) accession numbers om831146 om831147 om831148 om831149 om831150 om831151 om831152 om831153 and om831154 10 1371/journal pntd 0011908 g003 fig 3 for all cities the highest ir was observed in 2018 (corresponding to the post-rainy season) in both male and female specimens10 1371/journal pntd 0011908 t004 table 4 city year no pools no."

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Evidence found in paper:

"The authors have declared that no competing interests exist."

Evidence found in paper:

"RS, AMSI, SJR, MN received funding from the National Science Foundation Zika Rapid (DEB-161145). ALR, RS, AMSI, SJR, EM, FH, MN received funding from the National Science Foundation Ecology and Evolution of Infectious Diseases grant (DEB-52 1518681). EM received support from the U.S. National Science Foundation (DEB-2011147, with the Fogarty International Center), the National Institutes of Health (R35GM133439), and the Stanford University Woods Institute for the Environment and Center for Innovation in Global Health. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript."

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Last Updated: Aug 05, 2025