| Virus | Human fatality rate | Vector | IFN antagonism | MTLV similarity | |-------|--------------------|--------|----------------|------------------| | SFTSV | 12–30% | Haemaphysalis longicornis | Strong (NSs) | Genomic architecture | | Heartland virus | ~10% | A. americanum | Moderate | Vector, geography | | MTLV | 0% (no known cases) | A. americanum | Weak | M segment structure |
Serving as the chassis for command posts, ambulances, and engineering vehicles in Arctic brigades. Modern Deployment and the Arctic Context mt-lbv
(e.g., a lab strain of Lymnaea stagnalis virus or a bacterial phage), please clarify. The above assumes MT-LBV = Mountain Lake virus (phlebovirus). | Virus | Human fatality rate | Vector
The foundation of the MT-LBV is the MT-LB hull. It is a lightly armored, fully tracked vehicle designed to be amphibious. The hull is made of welded steel, providing protection against small arms fire and artillery splinters. Modern Deployment and the Arctic Context (e
With the increasing strategic importance of the High North, the MT-LBV has seen a resurgence in relevance.
The vehicle's story begins in 1972, born from the realization that standard armored personnel carriers (APCs) like the BTR and BMP were struggling in the vast, mushy terrains of the Soviet North and Far East.