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Fig. 6 | Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica

Fig. 6

From: Evidence of rustrela virus-associated feline staggering disease in Sweden since the 1970s

Fig. 6

Phylogenetic analysis and spatial distribution of rustrela virus (RusV) infections in Europe. A Phylogenetic analysis of rustrela virus (RusV) infections in Europe. Neighbor-Joining phylogenetic tree of partial RusV p150 sequences (409 nt; MEGA version 11.0.13; TN93 + G + I; 1,000 bootstrap replicates). Only bootstrap values at major branches are shown in the phylogenetic tree. RusV sequence names are shown in the format “host/ISO 1366 code of location (federal state.country)/animal ID/year”. Sequences generated during this study are depicted in bold and marked with a red dot. B Mapping of the geographic origin of RusV-positive animals in Sweden. Colours represent the phylogenetic clades of the sequences. Grey circles represent RusV-positive cats investigated in this study without available sequence, whereas the three cats with available sequences are indicated by NRL code. White circles with central dot mark the location of Uppsala and Stockholm. The respective hosts are indicated by circles (domestic cats), squares (lions), triangle (wild animals), upside-down triangles (zoo animals) or diamonds (Apodemus spp.). AUT Austria, GER Germany, SWE Sweden, BB Brandenburg, BE Berlin, MV Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, NI Lower Saxony, NW North Rhine-Westphalia. Made with Natural Earth

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