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Virus taxonomy ?
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BubikolRamios |
Posted on 23-01-2014 19:43
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Member Location: Slovenia Posts: 1726 Joined: 14.06.09 |
example: https://en.wikipe...spot_virus see there: Species: Impatiens necrotic spot virus Means ? No latin scientific names for that ? Edited by BubikolRamios on 23-01-2014 19:43 highly searchable nature photo galery --> http://agrozoo.ne....jsp?l2=en |
Xespok |
Posted on 23-01-2014 21:32
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Member Location: Debrecen, Hungary Posts: 5550 Joined: 02.03.05 |
In viruses and microorganisms traditional taxonomical concepts rarely work, and now essentially all major players agree that species is not a valid and meaningful entity to describe these forms of life. Here one can talk about strains, or even just isolates. The reason for this is that the genome of these organisms are not very stable, as they continuously undergo various forms of genome shuffling. Therefore you are less and less likely to find Linnean-like names for viruses and microorganisms. Gabor Keresztes Japan Wildlife Gallery Carpathian Basin Wildlife Gallery |
John Carr |
Posted on 24-01-2014 02:25
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Member Location: Massachusetts, USA Posts: 10176 Joined: 22.10.10 |
A virologist discusses the subject here: http://www.microb...sification. See also http://en.wikiped...sification. Plant viruses get non-Latin names like "tobacco mosaic virus." Animal viruses are assigned a Latin family and genus. Above and below that level classification diverges from zoological nomenclature. Plants, like viruses and bacteria, have a large amount of horizontal gene transfer and commonly propagate asexually. They still have binomial names. |
ValerioW |
Posted on 01-08-2014 20:35
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Member Location: Padova - Italy Posts: 982 Joined: 01.06.12 |
I've always liked Baltimore classification that bases classes on genome's type and chain. From that everything starts |
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