Authors
James LN Wood, Melissa Leach, Linda Waldman, Hayley MacGregor, Anthony R Fooks, Kate E Jones, Olivier Restif, Dina Dechmann, David TS Hayman, Kate S Baker, Alison J Peel, Alexandra O Kamins, Jakob Fahr, Yaa Ntiamoa-Baidu, Richard Suu-Ire, Robert F Breiman, Jonathan H Epstein, Hume E Field, Andrew A Cunningham
Publication date
2012/10/19
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
367
Issue
1604
Pages
2881-2892
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Many serious emerging zoonotic infections have recently arisen from bats, including Ebola, Marburg, SARS-coronavirus, Hendra, Nipah, and a number of rabies and rabies-related viruses, consistent with the overall observation that wildlife are an important source of emerging zoonoses for the human population. Mechanisms underlying the recognized association between ecosystem health and human health remain poorly understood and responding appropriately to the ecological, social and economic conditions that facilitate disease emergence and transmission represents a substantial societal challenge. In the context of disease emergence from wildlife, wildlife and habitat should be conserved, which in turn will preserve vital ecosystem structure and function, which has broader implications for human wellbeing and environmental sustainability, while simultaneously minimizing the spillover of pathogens from …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JLN Wood, M Leach, L Waldman, H MacGregor… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2012