Rhabdoviridae
0 sources
Rhabdoviridae
Summary
Rhabdoviridae is a taxon[1]. Rhabdoviridae ranks in the top 0.72% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (866 views/month, #1,414 of 195,241).[2]
Key Facts
- Rhabdoviridae's instance of is recorded as taxon[3].
- Rhabdoviridae is classified at the rank of family[4].
- Rhabdoviridae belongs to the parent taxon Mononegavirales[5].
- Rhabdoviridae's scientific name is Rhabdoviridae[6].
- Rhabdoviridae's Commons category is recorded as Rhabdoviridae[7].
- Rhabdoviridae's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Rhabdoviridae[8].
- Rhabdoviridae is commonly known as {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Rabies Virus & relatives'}[9].
- Rhabdoviridae is commonly known as {'lang': 'es', 'text': 'Rhabdovirus'}[10].
- Rhabdoviridae is commonly known as {'lang': 'ja', 'text': 'ラブドウイルス科'}[11].
- Rhabdoviridae is commonly known as {'lang': 'pl', 'text': 'Rabdowirusy'}[12].
- Rhabdoviridae is commonly known as {'lang': 'zh', 'text': '炮彈病毒科'}[13].
- Rhabdoviridae is commonly known as {'lang': 'sl', 'text': 'rabdovirusi'}[14].
- Rhabdoviridae's ICTV virus genome composition is recorded as negative-sense single strand RNA virus[15].
Body
Classification
Under binomial nomenclature, Rhabdoviridae is Rhabdoviridae[6]. Rhabdoviridae is classified at the rank of family[4]. Rhabdoviridae belongs to the parent taxon Mononegavirales[5]. Recorded taxon common name include {'lang': 'en', 'text': 'Rabies Virus & relatives'}[9], {'lang': 'es', 'text': 'Rhabdovirus'}[10], {'lang': 'ja', 'text': 'ラブドウイルス科'}[11], {'lang': 'pl', 'text': 'Rabdowirusy'}[12], {'lang': 'zh', 'text': '炮彈病毒科'}[13], and {'lang': 'sl', 'text': 'rabdovirusi'}[14].
Identifiers
Rhabdoviridae's NCBI taxonomy ID is recorded as 11270[16]. Rhabdoviridae's Encyclopedia of Life ID is recorded as 8054[17]. Rhabdoviridae's GBIF taxon ID is recorded as 7758[18].
Why It Matters
Rhabdoviridae ranks in the top 0.72% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (866 views/month, #1,414 of 195,241).[2] Rhabdoviridae has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19] Rhabdoviridae is known by 17 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]