Trends in Parasitology, volume 31, issue 4, pages 149-159
Emerging infectious diseases of wildlife: a critical perspective
Daniel M. Tompkins
1
,
S Carver
2
,
Menna E. Jones
2
,
Martin Krkošek
3
,
Lee F. Skerratt
4
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2015-04-01
Journal:
Trends in Parasitology
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR: 1.658
CiteScore: 14.0
Impact factor: 7
ISSN: 14714922, 14715007
Infectious Diseases
Parasitology
Abstract
We review the literature to distinguish reports of vertebrate wildlife disease emergence with sufficient evidence, enabling a robust assessment of emergence drivers. For potentially emerging agents that cannot be confirmed, sufficient data on prior absence (or a prior difference in disease dynamics) are frequently lacking. Improved surveillance, particularly for neglected host taxa, geographical regions and infectious agents, would enable more effective management should emergence occur. Exposure to domestic sources of infection and human-assisted exposure to wild sources were identified as the two main drivers of emergence across host taxa; the domestic source was primary for fish while the wild source was primary for other taxa. There was generally insufficient evidence for major roles of other hypothesized drivers of emergence.
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