首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences >A comparison of bats and rodents as reservoirs of zoonotic viruses: are bats special?
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A comparison of bats and rodents as reservoirs of zoonotic viruses: are bats special?

机译:蝙蝠和啮齿动物作为人畜共患病毒的储库的比较:蝙蝠是否特别?

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摘要

Bats are the natural reservoirs of a number of high-impact viral zoonoses. We present a quantitative analysis to address the hypothesis that bats are unique in their propensity to host zoonotic viruses based on a comparison with rodents, another important host order. We found that bats indeed host more zoonotic viruses per species than rodents, and we identified life-history and ecological factors that promote zoonotic viral richness. More zoonotic viruses are hosted by species whose distributions overlap with a greater number of other species in the same taxonomic order (sympatry). Specifically in bats, there was evidence for increased zoonotic viral richness in species with smaller litters (one young), greater longevity and more litters per year. Furthermore, our results point to a new hypothesis to explain in part why bats host more zoonotic viruses per species: the stronger effect of sympatry in bats and more viruses shared between bat species suggests that interspecific transmission is more prevalent among bats than among rodents. Although bats host more zoonotic viruses per species, the total number of zoonotic viruses identified in bats (61) was lower than in rodents (68), a result of there being approximately twice the number of rodent species as bat species. Therefore, rodents should still be a serious concern as reservoirs of emerging viruses. These findings shed light on disease emergence and perpetuation mechanisms and may help lead to a predictive framework for identifying future emerging infectious virus reservoirs.
机译:蝙蝠是许多具有高影响力的病毒性人畜共患病的天然宿主。我们提出了一种定量分析,以解决以下假设:蝙蝠与啮齿动物(另一种重要的宿主顺序)进行比较后,它们具有宿主人畜共患病病毒的独特性。我们发现蝙蝠确实比每个啮齿动物拥有更多的人畜共患病毒,并且我们发现了促进人畜共患病毒丰富性的生活史和生态因素。更多的人畜共患病毒由以相同的分类顺序(符号)分布与许多其他物种重叠的物种寄主。特别是在蝙蝠中,有证据表明,凋落物较小(一岁),寿命更长和每年更多的凋落物种类增加了人畜共患病毒。此外,我们的研究结果提出了一个新的假设,以部分解释为什么蝙蝠在每个物种中携带更多的人畜共患病毒:蝙蝠中共生效应的增强以及蝙蝠物种之间共享的更多病毒表明,种间传播比啮齿动物更为普遍。尽管蝙蝠每个物种携带更多的人畜共患病毒,但在蝙蝠中发现的人畜共患病毒总数(61)低于啮齿动物(68),其结果是啮齿动物物种数量约为蝙蝠物种的两倍。因此,啮齿动物仍应作为新出现的病毒库而受到严重关注。这些发现揭示了疾病的出现和永存机制,并可能有助于建立一个预测框架,以识别未来出现的传染性病毒库。

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