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Bats, Coronaviruses, and Deforestation: Toward the Emergence of Novel Infectious Diseases?

Autor
Afelt, Aneta
Frutos, Roger
Devaux, Christian
Data publikacji
2018
Abstrakt (EN)

Coronaviruses (CoV) were for a long time associated with several major veterinary diseases such as avian infectious coronavirus, calf diarrhea, winter dysentery, respiratory infections (BRD-BCoV) in cattle, SDCV, PEDV, SECD in swine and dog, intestinal disease or Feline Infectious Peritonitis (Saif, 2014), and the humanmild and common cold. However, SARS emerged in 2002 in China and spread across 29 other countries with a 10% death rate. More recently, the MERS-CoV outbreak in Saudi Arabia in 2012 displayed a death rate of 38%. The emergence of these two events of highly pathogenic CoVs shed light on the threat posed by coronaviruses to humans. Bats are hosting many viruses (Calisher et al., 2006) and in particular coronaviruses, which represent 31% of their virome (Chen et al., 2014). Furthermore, bats display a remarkable resistance to viruses (Omatsu et al., 2007; Storm et al., 2018). The risk of emergence of a novel bat-CoV disease can therefore be envisioned.

Słowa kluczowe EN
bat
coronavirus
deforestation
emergence
anthropization
novel contacts
mosaic landscape
Dyscyplina PBN
nauki o Ziemi i środowisku
Czasopismo
Frontiers in Microbiology
Tom
9
Strony od-do
702
ISSN
1664-302X
Data udostępnienia w otwartym dostępie
2018-04-11
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Uznanie autorstwa