Virus Taxonomy:
The Seventh Report of the
International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses.
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Edited by M.H.V. van Regenmortel C.M. Fauquet D.H.L. Bishop E.B. Carstens M.K. Estes
S.M. Lemon J. Maniloff M.A. Mayo D.J. McGeoch C.R. Pringle R.B. WicknerHardcover, 1st ed., 1024pp
Academic Press (2000)
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Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction to the Species Concept in Virus Taxonomy
The ICTVdB
The Viruses: A Glossary of Abbreviations and Terms
The Virus Diagrams
Taxa Listed Alphabetically
Taxa Listed by Nucleic Acid and Size of the Genome
A Key to the Placement of the Viruses in Taxa
The Order of Presentation of the Viruses
Descriptions of Virus Taxa
The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses: Officers and Members of the ICTV, 1996-1999
The Statutes of the ICTV, 1998
The Code of Virus Classification and Nomenclature, 1998
The Format for Submission of New Taxonomic Proposals
Indexes: Index of Viruses
Index of Taxa
ABOUT THE BOOK
Synopsis
Universal, unambiguous virus taxonomy (naming and categorization) is vital for distinguishing the thousands of viruses which have been isolated from humans, animals, plants, fungi, bacteria, and archae. Before an official identification and classification system was devised, there was much confusion and duplication of viruses isolated in different labs around the world. The first internationally organized attempts to introduce some order in the bewildering variety of viruses took place at the International Congress of Microbiology held in Moscow in 1966. A Committee was created, later called The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) which was given the task of developing a single, universal taxonomic scheme for all the viruses.
This is the seventh report produced by the ICTV and builds on the accumulated taxonomic data of its predecessors and records the proceedings of the Committee since 1995, including decisions reached at the Tenth International Congress of Virology held in Jerusalem in 1996, and at mid-term meetings in 1997 and 1998. The information is essential for anyone working in the field of virology. Clinicians in diagnostic laboratories, researchers citing viruses in published papers, and virologists in the business industry all must have the most updated virus taxonomy to make the appropriate references. The number of recognized viruses continues to grow with the development of better detection techniques, and the rapid evolution of virus variants.
From The Publisher
The official reference for virus taxonomy and nomenclature
Contains 30% new taxa, including two major new contributions on the
phylogenetic relationships between viruses, and application of the virus
species concept throughout the virus world
Compiles information from 300-400 experts
Covers over 4000 recognized viruses, organized by family, with diagrams
of genome organization and virus replication cycle where know
Includes over 300 figures and illustrations