A comparison of bats and rodents as reservoirs of zoonotic viruses: are bats special?
National Institutes of Health · Fogarty International Center · +13 more institutions
Abstract
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),…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.42
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 168
Authors
14- ADAngela D. LuisCorresponding
National Institutes of Health, Fogarty International Center, Colorado State University
- DTDavid T. S. Hayman
Zoological Society of London, Animal and Plant Health Agency, University of Cambridge, Colorado State University
- TJThomas J. O’Shea
United States Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center
- PMPaul M. Cryan
United States Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center
- ATAmy T. Gilbert
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases
Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Sympatry
- Host (biology)
- Zoology
- Species richness
- Disease reservoir
- Ecology
- Rodent
- Life in Land