Authors
Simon J Anthony, Jonathan H Epstein, Kris A Murray, Isamara Navarrete-Macias, Carlos M Zambrana-Torrelio, Alexander Solovyov, Rafael Ojeda-Flores, Nicole C Arrigo, Ariful Islam, Shahneaz Ali Khan, Parviez Hosseini, Tiffany L Bogich, Kevin J Olival, Maria D Sanchez-Leon, William B Karesh, Tracey Goldstein, Stephen P Luby, Stephen S Morse, Jonna AK Mazet, Peter Daszak, W Ian Lipkin
Publication date
2013/11/1
Journal
MBio
Volume
4
Issue
5
Pages
10.1128/mbio. 00598-13
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Description
The majority of emerging zoonoses originate in wildlife, and many are caused by viruses. However, there are no rigorous estimates of total viral diversity (here termed “virodiversity”) for any wildlife species, despite the utility of this to future surveillance and control of emerging zoonoses. In this case study, we repeatedly sampled a mammalian wildlife host known to harbor emerging zoonotic pathogens (the Indian Flying Fox, Pteropus giganteus) and used PCR with degenerate viral family-level primers to discover and analyze the occurrence patterns of 55 viruses from nine viral families. We then adapted statistical techniques used to estimate biodiversity in vertebrates and plants and estimated the total viral richness of these nine families in P. giganteus to be 58 viruses. Our analyses demonstrate proof-of-concept of a strategy for estimating viral richness and provide the first statistically supported estimate of the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SJ Anthony, JH Epstein, KA Murray, I Navarrete-Macias… - MBio, 2013