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Primates and the ecology of their infectious diseases: How will anthropogenic change affect host-parasite interactions?

机译:灵长类动物及其传染病的生态学:人为变化将如何影响宿主与寄生虫的相互作用?

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The sudden appearance of diseases like SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome(1)), the devastating impacts of diseases like Ebola on both human and wildlife communities,(2,3) and the immense social and economic costs created by viruses like HIV4 underscore our need to understand the ecology of infectious diseases. Given that monkeys and apes often share parasites with humans, understanding the ecology of infectious diseases in nonhuman primates is of paramount importance. This is well illustrated by the HIV viruses, the causative agents of human AIDS, which evolved recently from related viruses of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) and sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys(5)), as well as by the outbreaks of Ebola virus, which trace their origins to zoonotic transmissions from local apes.(6) A consideration of how environmental change may promote contact between humans and nonhuman primates and thus increase the possibility of sharing infectious diseases detrimental to humans or nonhuman primates is now paramount in conservation and human health planning.
机译:诸如SARS(严重急性呼吸系统综合症(1))等疾病的突然出现,埃博拉等疾病对人类和野生动植物社区的毁灭性影响(2,3)以及诸如HIV4的病毒所造成的巨大社会和经济损失,凸显了我们需要了解传染病的生态学。鉴于猴子和猿猴经常与人类共享寄生虫,因此了解非人类灵长类动物的传染病生态至关重要。 HIV病毒是人类AIDS的病原体,最近从黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)和煤烟o(Cercocebus atys(5))的相关病毒演变而来,埃博拉病毒的爆发也很好地说明了这一点。 (6)考虑环境变化如何促进人类与非人类灵长类动物之间的接触,从而增加分享对人类或非人类灵长类动物有害的传染病的可能性,现在对保护和人类健康至为重要规划。

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