B
BL Munday
Researcher at University of Tasmania
Publications - 84
Citations - 4184
BL Munday is an academic researcher from University of Tasmania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Salmo & Amoebic gill disease. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 84 publications receiving 3950 citations. Previous affiliations of BL Munday include Cooperative Research Centre & Oregon State University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Betanodavirus infections of teleost fish: a review
BL Munday,Jimmy Kwang,N.J. Moody +2 more
TL;DR: In the last decade betanodavirus infections have emerged as major constraints on the culture of marine fish in all parts of the world with the exception of the African continent and the measures identified have not been adequately implemented by producers with the result that catastrophic losses still occur on a regular basis.
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M6P/IGF2R imprinting evolution in mammals.
J. Keith Killian,James C. Byrd,James V Jirtle,BL Munday,Michael K. Stoskopf,Richard G. MacDonald,Randy L. Jirtle +6 more
TL;DR: It is shown that M6P/IGF2R is not imprinted in monotremes and does not encode for a receptor that binds IGF2, and invasive placentation and gestational fetal growth are not required for imprinted genes to evolve.
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Evolution of interleukin-1β
TL;DR: How the IL-1β gene has changed through vertebrate evolution and whether its role and regulation are conserved within selected non-mammalian vertebrates is considered.
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Nodaviruses as pathogens in larval and juvenile marine finfish
BL Munday,T. Nakai +1 more
TL;DR: Nodaviruses have emerged as major pathogens of a wide range of larval and juvenile marine finfish in aquaculture worldwide and display considerable serological and molecular homology, although the present evidence suggests that there is more than one agent causing disease in a range of species.
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Gill disease of marine fish caused by infection with Neoparamoeba pemaquidensis
TL;DR: Atlantic salmon appears to be themost susceptible with rainbow trout, Oncorhynchusmykiss (Walbaum), also suffering significant disease, and the only effective treatment for AGD is a freshwaterbath.