Uncategorized

Cryptic hybridization between the ancient lineages of Natterer’s bat (Myotis nattereri)

Our new article about the cryptic hybridization in Myotis nattereri published in Molecular Ecology! Proud to be part of this huge work done by the colleagues! The characterization of cryptic hybrid zones with genome-wide analysis is in its early stages and offers new perspectives for studying population admixture and thus the impact of gene flow.

Read More 

OneBAT is starting!

Our new Horizon program “One Health approach to understand, predict and prevent viral emergencies from bats” starts with the National Laboratory of Virology, University of Pécs and several other fantastic partner institutions! In recent years, several novel RNA viruses found in bats have been associated to the emergence of human diseases. Surveillance in this extremely

Read More 

Három OTKA pályázatunk is nyert 2023-ban

Nagyszerű hírek érkeztek az NKFIH háza tájáról, mindhárom OTKA pályázat nyert, melyben résztvevő kutatóként szerepet vállaltam:Kemenesi Gábor: Lloviu cuevavírus: egy ígéretes modell a denevér eredetű humánpatogén filovírusok megértéséhez (Pécsi Tudományegyetem)Zsebők Sándor: Napelemek és a denevérek: érzékelési, viselkedési és ökológiai vizsgálatok – az élővilág-barát megújuló energiáért (Ökológiai Kutatóközpont)Lanszki József: Mit árulhat el egyetlen faj a környezeti

Read More 

Our preprint on coronaviruses is online

With French and Vietnamese colleagues we studied the coronavirus diversity of horseshoe bats (Rhinolophus spp.) in Vietnam. Previous studies have described many coronaviruses related to SARS-CoV (SARSCoVr) in China and only a few coronaviruses related to SARS-CoV-2 (SARSCoV2r) in Yunnan, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand. In our preprint we report the results of several field missions

Read More 

The isolation of Lloviu virus from Italy

Lloviu cuevavirus (LLOV) was the first identified member of Filoviridae family outside the Ebola and Marburgvirus genera. A massive die-off of Schreibers’s bats (Miniopterus schreibersii) in the Iberian Peninsula in 2002 led to its initial discovery. Recent studies with recombinant and wild-type LLOV isolates confirmed the zoonotic nature of the virus in vitro. We examined bat samples from Italy for the presence

Read More