
Viruses and Climate Change
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Viruses and Climate Change, Volume 114 in the Advances in Virus Research series, highlights new advances in the field, with this new volume presenting interesting chapters on carbon-cycle and vector-borne viruses. Chapters in this release cover Viruses in the carbon cycle and the impacts on climate change and Climate change and mosquito-borne virus transmission.
Key Features
- Provides the authority and expertise of leading contributors from an international board of authors
- Presents the latest release in Advances in Virus Research serials
- Updated release includes the latest information on Viruses and Climate Change
Readership
Researchers, students, and academics in the field of virus research
Table of Contents
1. Israel Pagán Muñoz
2. Kathryn Hanley
3. Viruses in the carbon cycle and the impacts climate change
K. Eric Wommack
4. Climate change and mosquito-borne virus transmission
Alexander T. Ciota
Product details
- No. of pages: 258
- Language: English
- Copyright: © Academic Press 2022
- Published: December 1, 2022
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Hardcover ISBN: 9780323912129
About the Serial Volume Editors
Marilyn Roossinck
Prof. Marilyn J. Roossinck works at the Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania, USA.
Affiliations and Expertise
Professor, Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics, Pennsylvania State University, Pennsylvania, USA
Kathryn Hanley
Dr. Kathryn A. Hanley, Regents Professor of Biology at New Mexico State University, is a proud native of New Jersey. She graduated magna cum laude with a major in Biology from Amherst College and completed her PhD in Biology at the University of California, San Diego.
She conducted post-doctoral research at UC Davis, the University of Maryland and the National Institutes of Health, where she participated in the development of the NIH dengue virus vaccine. Since joining NMSU in 2004 she has investigated the ecology and molecular biology of arboviruses in the laboratory and the field. Her field studies have shed light on the risk of emergence of new virus strains across the tropics, and the potential for transmission of mosquito-borne viruses in the U.S.
Her laboratory studies have focused on identifying the factors that shape the evolution of flaviviruses and on developing new drugs to treat these viruses. She has been married to Tim Wright, also a Professor of Biology at NMSU, for more than 25 years and has two gorgeous kids, Nicholas and Madeleine.
Affiliations and Expertise
Regents Professor of Biology, New Mexico State University, USA