Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Host–pathogen evolutionary signatures reveal dynamics and future invasions of vampire bat rabies

2016; National Academy of Sciences; Volume: 113; Issue: 39 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1073/pnas.1606587113

ISSN

1091-6490

Autores

Daniel G. Streicker, Jamie Winternitz, Dara A. Satterfield, Rene Edgar Condori-Condori, Alice Broos, Carlos Tello, Sergio Recuenco, Andrés Velasco-Villa, Sonia Altizer, William Valderrama,

Tópico(s)

Poxvirus research and outbreaks

Resumo

Significance In Latin America, vampire bat rabies constrains livestock production and is the main cause of lethal human rabies outbreaks. Despite knowledge that bat dispersal prevents viral extinction and compromises control campaigns, the movement patterns of infected bats are unknown. Using large host and virus datasets, we illustrate a genetic approach to link population level patterns of host dispersal to pathogen spatial spread that overcomes logistical limitations of tracking animal movement in the wild. The results implicate male vampire bats as contributing disproportionately to rabies spatial spread and offer opportunities to forecast and prevent rabies. The ubiquity of sex-biased dispersal in animals suggests sex-biased pathogen spread could widely influence the distribution and invasion dynamics of emerging diseases.

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