PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, ISSN 0962-8436, 09/2019, Volume 374, Issue 1782, p. 20180342
Spillover of a pathogen from a wildlife reservoir into a human or livestock host requires the pathogen to overcome a hierarchical series of barriers....
cross-species transmission | spillover | DISEASE-CONTROL | MALARIA VECTORS | POTENTIAL IMPLICATIONS | IDENTIFYING RESERVOIRS | NIPAH VIRUS | management | zoonotic diseases | DESMODUS-ROTUNDUS | HUMAN RABIES | BIOLOGY | FLYING FOXES | ecological interventions | DATE PALM SAP | VAMPIRE BATS | 1001 | Review
cross-species transmission | spillover | DISEASE-CONTROL | MALARIA VECTORS | POTENTIAL IMPLICATIONS | IDENTIFYING RESERVOIRS | NIPAH VIRUS | management | zoonotic diseases | DESMODUS-ROTUNDUS | HUMAN RABIES | BIOLOGY | FLYING FOXES | ecological interventions | DATE PALM SAP | VAMPIRE BATS | 1001 | Review
Journal Article
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, ISSN 0962-8436, 09/2019, Volume 374, Issue 1782, p. 20190014
cross-species transmission | VIRUS TRANSMISSION | BRUCELLOSIS | DOSE-RESPONSE | ENVIRONMENT | RISK | HOST | EMERGENCE | epidemics | interventions | DISEASE | BIOLOGY | surveillance | zoonotic | pandemics | FEVER | 200 | 203 | 1001
Journal Article
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, ISSN 0962-8436, 09/2019, Volume 374, Issue 1782, p. 20190224
Disease emergence events, epidemics and pandemics all underscore the need to predict zoonotic pathogen spillover. Because cross-species transmission is...
mechanistic | cross-species transmission | VIRUS | RISK | pathogen discovery | ZOONOTIC DISEASE | zoonosis | BIOLOGY | RESERVOIR HOSTS | ECOLOGY | MALARIA | LYME-DISEASE INCIDENCE | surveillance | macroecology | PLASMODIUM-KNOWLESI INFECTIONS | EPIDEMIOLOGY
mechanistic | cross-species transmission | VIRUS | RISK | pathogen discovery | ZOONOTIC DISEASE | zoonosis | BIOLOGY | RESERVOIR HOSTS | ECOLOGY | MALARIA | LYME-DISEASE INCIDENCE | surveillance | macroecology | PLASMODIUM-KNOWLESI INFECTIONS | EPIDEMIOLOGY
Journal Article
4.
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Modeling elk‐to‐livestock transmission risk to predict hotspots of brucellosis spillover
The Journal of Wildlife Management, ISSN 0022-541X, 05/2019, Volume 83, Issue 4, pp. 817 - 829
ABSTRACT Wildlife reservoirs of infectious disease are a major source of human‐wildlife conflict because of the risk of potential spillover associated with...
habitat selection | cross‐species pathogen spillover | wildlife disease | Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem | resource selection function | Brucella abortus | Cervus canadensis | human‐wildlife conflict | cross-species pathogen spillover | human-wildlife conflict | CONFLICT | SIZES | CATTLE | BISON | ZOOLOGY | DISEASE | MOVEMENT | WILDLIFE | ECOLOGY | RESOURCE SELECTION | PHENOLOGY | RANGE | Disease transmission | Wildlife research | Brucellosis | Animals as carriers of disease | Livestock | Research | Zoonoses | Demography | Elk | Ecosystems | Health risks | Environmental changes | Grazing | Telemetry | Disease control | Infectious diseases | Risk assessment | Allotments | Predictions | Wildlife management | Risk management
habitat selection | cross‐species pathogen spillover | wildlife disease | Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem | resource selection function | Brucella abortus | Cervus canadensis | human‐wildlife conflict | cross-species pathogen spillover | human-wildlife conflict | CONFLICT | SIZES | CATTLE | BISON | ZOOLOGY | DISEASE | MOVEMENT | WILDLIFE | ECOLOGY | RESOURCE SELECTION | PHENOLOGY | RANGE | Disease transmission | Wildlife research | Brucellosis | Animals as carriers of disease | Livestock | Research | Zoonoses | Demography | Elk | Ecosystems | Health risks | Environmental changes | Grazing | Telemetry | Disease control | Infectious diseases | Risk assessment | Allotments | Predictions | Wildlife management | Risk management
Journal Article
Hydrobiologia, ISSN 0018-8158, 8/2015, Volume 755, Issue 1, pp. 225 - 237
Symbiont spillover involves the emergence of new interactions that can influence both the symbiont and the host invasion processes. Here we aimed at...
Life Sciences | Alien species | Zoology | Freshwater & Marine Ecology | Ecology | Host susceptibility | Host competence | Invertebrates | Wetland | Cross-species transmission | PARASITES | ENTOCYTHERIDAE | OSTRACODA | PROCAMBARUS-CLARKII | MUTUALISM | PREVALENCE | PATHOGEN SPILLOVER | ABUNDANCE | INVASION | COMPETITION | MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY | Communications equipment | Emissions (Pollution)
Life Sciences | Alien species | Zoology | Freshwater & Marine Ecology | Ecology | Host susceptibility | Host competence | Invertebrates | Wetland | Cross-species transmission | PARASITES | ENTOCYTHERIDAE | OSTRACODA | PROCAMBARUS-CLARKII | MUTUALISM | PREVALENCE | PATHOGEN SPILLOVER | ABUNDANCE | INVASION | COMPETITION | MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY | Communications equipment | Emissions (Pollution)
Journal Article
Ecology and Evolution, ISSN 2045-7758, 10/2018, Volume 8, Issue 19, pp. 9779 - 9792
Many pathogens infect multiple hosts, and spillover from domestic to wild species poses a significant risk of spread of diseases that threaten wildlife and...
cross‐species transmission | host‐shift | ancestral state reconstruction | disease ecology | Ca. Mycoplasma haemominutum | cross-species transmission | host-shift | MAMMALIAN CARNIVORES | FLORIDA PANTHERS | PHYLOGENETIC UNCERTAINTY | CTENOCEPHALIDES-FELIS | CANDIDATUS MYCOPLASMA-HAEMOMINUTUM | Mycoplasma haemominutum | REAL-TIME PCR | EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY | MOUNTAIN LIONS | HEMOTROPIC MYCOPLASMAS | ECOLOGY | INFECTED CATS | ZOONOTIC SPILLOVER | Pathogens | Cats | rRNA 16S | Documentation | Health risks | Interspecific | Vectors | Phylogeny | Gene sequencing | Predators | Disease transmission | Pathways | Wildlife | Bioaccumulation | Dispersal | Phylogenetics | Bacteria | Predation | Species | Genotypes
cross‐species transmission | host‐shift | ancestral state reconstruction | disease ecology | Ca. Mycoplasma haemominutum | cross-species transmission | host-shift | MAMMALIAN CARNIVORES | FLORIDA PANTHERS | PHYLOGENETIC UNCERTAINTY | CTENOCEPHALIDES-FELIS | CANDIDATUS MYCOPLASMA-HAEMOMINUTUM | Mycoplasma haemominutum | REAL-TIME PCR | EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY | MOUNTAIN LIONS | HEMOTROPIC MYCOPLASMAS | ECOLOGY | INFECTED CATS | ZOONOTIC SPILLOVER | Pathogens | Cats | rRNA 16S | Documentation | Health risks | Interspecific | Vectors | Phylogeny | Gene sequencing | Predators | Disease transmission | Pathways | Wildlife | Bioaccumulation | Dispersal | Phylogenetics | Bacteria | Predation | Species | Genotypes
Journal Article
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases, ISSN 1935-2727, 09/2016, Volume 10, Issue 9, p. e0004957
A considerable amount of disease is transmitted from animals to humans and many of these zoonoses are neglected tropical diseases. As outbreaks of SARS, avian...
MASTOMYS-NATALENSIS | AFRICA | VIRUS | LASSA FEVER | SIERRA-LEONE | POPULATIONS | DISEASE EMERGENCE | SCIENCE | EPIDEMIC | PARASITOLOGY | TROPICAL MEDICINE | PATHOGENS | Models, Theoretical | Rodentia - virology | Animals | Disease Susceptibility | Humans | Disease Outbreaks - prevention & control | Lassa Fever - transmission | Zoonoses - transmission | Disease transmission | Research | Epidemiology | Zoonoses | Epidemics | Stuttering | Funding | Bias | Colleges & universities | Infections | Veterinary medicine | Fever | Hospitals | Infectious diseases | Immunology | Public health
MASTOMYS-NATALENSIS | AFRICA | VIRUS | LASSA FEVER | SIERRA-LEONE | POPULATIONS | DISEASE EMERGENCE | SCIENCE | EPIDEMIC | PARASITOLOGY | TROPICAL MEDICINE | PATHOGENS | Models, Theoretical | Rodentia - virology | Animals | Disease Susceptibility | Humans | Disease Outbreaks - prevention & control | Lassa Fever - transmission | Zoonoses - transmission | Disease transmission | Research | Epidemiology | Zoonoses | Epidemics | Stuttering | Funding | Bias | Colleges & universities | Infections | Veterinary medicine | Fever | Hospitals | Infectious diseases | Immunology | Public health
Journal Article
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Onward transmission of viruses: how do viruses emerge to cause epidemics after spillover?
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, ISSN 0962-8436, 09/2019, Volume 374, Issue 1782, p. 20190017
The critical step in the emergence of a new epidemic or pandemic viral pathogen occurs after it infects the initial spillover host and then is successfully...
influenza | SPECIFICITY | CANINE PARVOVIRUS | parvovirus | epidemic emergence | virus | host range | IDENTIFYING RESERVOIRS | FELINE | EVOLUTION | HIV | INFLUENZA-A VIRUS | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | BIOLOGY | ECOLOGY | INFECTION | RECEPTOR-BINDING
influenza | SPECIFICITY | CANINE PARVOVIRUS | parvovirus | epidemic emergence | virus | host range | IDENTIFYING RESERVOIRS | FELINE | EVOLUTION | HIV | INFLUENZA-A VIRUS | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | BIOLOGY | ECOLOGY | INFECTION | RECEPTOR-BINDING
Journal Article
EcoHealth, ISSN 1612-9202, 12/2017, Volume 14, Issue 4, pp. 840 - 850
Zoonotic transmissions are a major global health risk, and human–animal contact is frequently raised as an important driver of transmission. A literature...
Disease emergence | Public Health | Environmental Health | Microbiology | Water and Health | Ecosystems | Zoonosis | Spillover | Medicine & Public Health | Nonhuman primates | Animal Ecology | Human–animal contact | One Health | BACTERIAL TRANSMISSION | Human-animal contact | AFRICAN-GREEN MONKEYS | GASTROINTESTINAL PARASITES | PLASMODIUM-VIVAX | SIMIAN FOAMY VIRUS | ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES | INFECTIOUS-DISEASES | ANIMAL INTERFACE | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | MOUNTAIN GORILLAS | GREAT APES | Anthropology - organization & administration | Animals | Cameroon - epidemiology | Humans | Risk Factors | Zoonoses - epidemiology | Primates | Environment | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - epidemiology | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - transmission | Zoonoses - transmission | Medical research | Disease transmission | Analysis | Medicine, Experimental | Epidemiology | Zoonoses | Studies | Pathogens | Spatial discrimination | Health risks | Ecological monitoring | Public health | Geography | Life Sciences | Microbiology and Parasitology | Social Anthropology and ethnology | Santé publique et épidémiologie | Ecology, environment | Humanities and Social Sciences | Biodiversity and Ecology | Biodiversity | Environmental and Society | Environmental Sciences
Disease emergence | Public Health | Environmental Health | Microbiology | Water and Health | Ecosystems | Zoonosis | Spillover | Medicine & Public Health | Nonhuman primates | Animal Ecology | Human–animal contact | One Health | BACTERIAL TRANSMISSION | Human-animal contact | AFRICAN-GREEN MONKEYS | GASTROINTESTINAL PARASITES | PLASMODIUM-VIVAX | SIMIAN FOAMY VIRUS | ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES | INFECTIOUS-DISEASES | ANIMAL INTERFACE | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | MOUNTAIN GORILLAS | GREAT APES | Anthropology - organization & administration | Animals | Cameroon - epidemiology | Humans | Risk Factors | Zoonoses - epidemiology | Primates | Environment | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - epidemiology | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - transmission | Zoonoses - transmission | Medical research | Disease transmission | Analysis | Medicine, Experimental | Epidemiology | Zoonoses | Studies | Pathogens | Spatial discrimination | Health risks | Ecological monitoring | Public health | Geography | Life Sciences | Microbiology and Parasitology | Social Anthropology and ethnology | Santé publique et épidémiologie | Ecology, environment | Humanities and Social Sciences | Biodiversity and Ecology | Biodiversity | Environmental and Society | Environmental Sciences
Journal Article
Epidemics, ISSN 1755-4365, 2014, Volume 10, Issue C, pp. 35 - 39
Highlights • We summarize key challenges in modeling the emergence of novel infectious agents. • We focus on connections to data, including epidemiologic and...
Infectious Disease | Internal Medicine | Host jump | Zoonosis | Infectious disease dynamics | Cross-species spillover transmission | Emerging infectious diseases | UNITED-STATES | INFECTIOUS DISEASES | HOST | NIPAH VIRUS | TRANSMISSION | INFECTIOUS-DISEASES | DYNAMICS | SURVEILLANCE | INFLUENZA-VIRUS | OUTBREAK | SEVERITY | Animals | Species Specificity | Stochastic Processes | Humans | Zoonoses - epidemiology | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - epidemiology | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - transmission | Disease Reservoirs - statistics & numerical data | Models, Statistical | Population Surveillance | Zoonoses - transmission
Infectious Disease | Internal Medicine | Host jump | Zoonosis | Infectious disease dynamics | Cross-species spillover transmission | Emerging infectious diseases | UNITED-STATES | INFECTIOUS DISEASES | HOST | NIPAH VIRUS | TRANSMISSION | INFECTIOUS-DISEASES | DYNAMICS | SURVEILLANCE | INFLUENZA-VIRUS | OUTBREAK | SEVERITY | Animals | Species Specificity | Stochastic Processes | Humans | Zoonoses - epidemiology | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - epidemiology | Communicable Diseases, Emerging - transmission | Disease Reservoirs - statistics & numerical data | Models, Statistical | Population Surveillance | Zoonoses - transmission
Journal Article
ISSN 1935-2727, 2016
A considerable amount of disease is transmitted from animals to humans and many of these zoonoses are neglected tropical diseases. As outbreaks of SARS, avian...
Hawkes process | cross-species transmission | Lassa fever | stuttering chain | stuttering transmission | viral hemorrhagic fever | self-exciting process | zoonosis
Hawkes process | cross-species transmission | Lassa fever | stuttering chain | stuttering transmission | viral hemorrhagic fever | self-exciting process | zoonosis
Journal Article
EcoHealth, ISSN 1612-9202, 9/2017, Volume 14, Issue 3, pp. 552 - 563
Due to the high level of biological diversity in the Congo Basin and human population dependence on bushmeat, the DRC represents an ideal location for...
Public Health | Environmental Health | Hunting | Microbiology | Water and Health | Ecosystems | Emerging infections | Zoonosis | Wild animal exposure | Butchering | Spillover | Medicine & Public Health | Animal Ecology | NONHUMAN-PRIMATES | CENTRAL AFRICAN HUNTERS | RISK-FACTORS | VIRUS | ZOONOTIC DISEASE | EMERGENCE | BUSHMEAT | ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES | INFECTIOUS-DISEASES | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | HUMAN MONKEYPOX | Animals, Wild - microbiology | Cross-Sectional Studies | Humans | Middle Aged | Child, Preschool | Infant | Male | Risk Assessment - statistics & numerical data | Zoonoses - transmission | Young Adult | Democratic Republic of the Congo - epidemiology | Animals | Adolescent | Aged, 80 and over | Adult | Female | Aged | Child | Meat - microbiology | Zoonoses - microbiology | Disease transmission | Wildlife | Health aspects | Epidemiology | Zoonoses | Bats | Cooking | Outbreaks | Exposure | Biodiversity | Human populations | Wild animals | Rodents | Primates | Skin | Public health | Age
Public Health | Environmental Health | Hunting | Microbiology | Water and Health | Ecosystems | Emerging infections | Zoonosis | Wild animal exposure | Butchering | Spillover | Medicine & Public Health | Animal Ecology | NONHUMAN-PRIMATES | CENTRAL AFRICAN HUNTERS | RISK-FACTORS | VIRUS | ZOONOTIC DISEASE | EMERGENCE | BUSHMEAT | ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES | INFECTIOUS-DISEASES | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | HUMAN MONKEYPOX | Animals, Wild - microbiology | Cross-Sectional Studies | Humans | Middle Aged | Child, Preschool | Infant | Male | Risk Assessment - statistics & numerical data | Zoonoses - transmission | Young Adult | Democratic Republic of the Congo - epidemiology | Animals | Adolescent | Aged, 80 and over | Adult | Female | Aged | Child | Meat - microbiology | Zoonoses - microbiology | Disease transmission | Wildlife | Health aspects | Epidemiology | Zoonoses | Bats | Cooking | Outbreaks | Exposure | Biodiversity | Human populations | Wild animals | Rodents | Primates | Skin | Public health | Age
Journal Article
PLoS neglected tropical diseases, ISSN 1935-2727, 12/2018, Volume 12, Issue 12, p. e0006976
Emerging infectious diseases of zoonotic origin constitute a recurrent threat to global health. Nonhuman primates (NHPs) occupy an important place in zoonotic...
GABON | RISK-FACTORS | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | PREVENTION | ZOONOTIC DISEASE | RETROVIRUSES | EMERGENCE | EPIDEMIOLOGY | PARASITOLOGY | TROPICAL MEDICINE | SIMIAN FOAMY VIRUS | BUSHMEAT | Body fluids | Disease transmission | Distribution | Physiological aspects | Research | Risk factors | Zoonoses | Pandemics | Risk communication | Viruses | Monkeys | Parasites | Hemorrhage | Epidemiology | Meat | Human populations | Risks | Heterogeneity | Ecological effects | Fluids | Dynamics | Research methodology | Questionnaires | Emergence | Tropical environment | Primates | Bacteria | Species | Public health | Qualitative research | Pathogens | Apes | Hunting | Fluid dynamics | Health risks | Exposure | Logos | Studies | Disease prevention | Animals | Infectious diseases | Frequency | Handling | Life Sciences | Symbiosis | Santé publique et épidémiologie | Ecology, environment | Social Anthropology and ethnology | Humanities and Social Sciences
GABON | RISK-FACTORS | CROSS-SPECIES TRANSMISSION | PREVENTION | ZOONOTIC DISEASE | RETROVIRUSES | EMERGENCE | EPIDEMIOLOGY | PARASITOLOGY | TROPICAL MEDICINE | SIMIAN FOAMY VIRUS | BUSHMEAT | Body fluids | Disease transmission | Distribution | Physiological aspects | Research | Risk factors | Zoonoses | Pandemics | Risk communication | Viruses | Monkeys | Parasites | Hemorrhage | Epidemiology | Meat | Human populations | Risks | Heterogeneity | Ecological effects | Fluids | Dynamics | Research methodology | Questionnaires | Emergence | Tropical environment | Primates | Bacteria | Species | Public health | Qualitative research | Pathogens | Apes | Hunting | Fluid dynamics | Health risks | Exposure | Logos | Studies | Disease prevention | Animals | Infectious diseases | Frequency | Handling | Life Sciences | Symbiosis | Santé publique et épidémiologie | Ecology, environment | Social Anthropology and ethnology | Humanities and Social Sciences
Journal Article
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, ISSN 1051-0761, 03/2016, Volume 26, Issue 2, pp. 367 - 381
Understanding how landscape, host, and pathogen traits contribute to disease exposure requires systematic evaluations of pathogens within and among host...
cross-species transmission | HOST-SPECIFICITY | Bartonella sp | BOBCATS LYNX-RUFUS | NATIONAL-PARK | LEUKEMIA-VIRUS | feline immunodeficiency virus | PARASITE SPECIES RICHNESS | IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS | DISEASE PREVALENCE | feline calicivirus | feline panleukopenea virus | urbanization | LENTIVIRAL INFECTION | ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES | Toxoplasma gondii | domestic cat (Felis catus) | feline herpesvirus-1 | bobcat (Lynx rufus) | disease exposure | puma (Puma concolor) | TOXOPLASMA-GONDII | ECOLOGY | LIONS PUMA-CONCOLOR
cross-species transmission | HOST-SPECIFICITY | Bartonella sp | BOBCATS LYNX-RUFUS | NATIONAL-PARK | LEUKEMIA-VIRUS | feline immunodeficiency virus | PARASITE SPECIES RICHNESS | IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS | DISEASE PREVALENCE | feline calicivirus | feline panleukopenea virus | urbanization | LENTIVIRAL INFECTION | ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES | Toxoplasma gondii | domestic cat (Felis catus) | feline herpesvirus-1 | bobcat (Lynx rufus) | disease exposure | puma (Puma concolor) | TOXOPLASMA-GONDII | ECOLOGY | LIONS PUMA-CONCOLOR
Journal Article