The United States is the world's largest wildlife importer, and imported wild animals represent a potential source of zoonotic pathogens. Using data on mammals imported during 2000-2005, we assessed their potential to host 27 selected risk zoonoses and created a risk assessment that could inform policy making for wildlife importation and zoonotic disease surveillance. A total of 246,772 mammals in 190 genera (68 families) were imported. The most widespread agents of risk zoonoses were rabies virus (in 78 genera of mammals), Bacillus anthracis (57), Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (48), Echinococcus spp. (41), and Leptospira spp. (35). Genera capable of harboring the greatest number of risk zoonoses were Canis and Felis (14 each), Rattus ...
The worldwide trade in exotic animals is a potential moderator for the global dispersion of infectio...
Zoonoses (singular, zoonosis) are diseases transmissible from animals to man. There are over 200 suc...
The expanding international wildlife trade, combined with a lack of surveillance for key animal dise...
The United States is the world's largest wildlife importer, and imported wild animals represent a po...
Most new infectious diseases emerge when pathogens transfer from animals to humans1,2. The suspected...
Emerging infectious diseases in humans are frequently caused by pathogens originating from animal ho...
The global trade in wildlife has historically contributed to the emergence and spread of infectious ...
The articles on rabies and Marburg virus featured in this month's Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID)...
Zoonotic diseases cause millions of deaths every year. Diseases such as Ebola, severe acute respirat...
Zoonotic diseases cause millions of deaths every year. Diseases such as Ebola, severe acute respirat...
Zoonoses with a wildlife reservoir represent a major public health problem, affecting all continents...
Most emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic; wildlife constitutes a large and often unknown reser...
More than 60% of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic anim...
Most emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic; wildlife constitutes a large and often unknown reser...
In Canada, there have been calls for increased research into and surveillance of wildlife trade and ...
The worldwide trade in exotic animals is a potential moderator for the global dispersion of infectio...
Zoonoses (singular, zoonosis) are diseases transmissible from animals to man. There are over 200 suc...
The expanding international wildlife trade, combined with a lack of surveillance for key animal dise...
The United States is the world's largest wildlife importer, and imported wild animals represent a po...
Most new infectious diseases emerge when pathogens transfer from animals to humans1,2. The suspected...
Emerging infectious diseases in humans are frequently caused by pathogens originating from animal ho...
The global trade in wildlife has historically contributed to the emergence and spread of infectious ...
The articles on rabies and Marburg virus featured in this month's Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID)...
Zoonotic diseases cause millions of deaths every year. Diseases such as Ebola, severe acute respirat...
Zoonotic diseases cause millions of deaths every year. Diseases such as Ebola, severe acute respirat...
Zoonoses with a wildlife reservoir represent a major public health problem, affecting all continents...
Most emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic; wildlife constitutes a large and often unknown reser...
More than 60% of human infectious diseases are caused by pathogens shared with wild or domestic anim...
Most emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic; wildlife constitutes a large and often unknown reser...
In Canada, there have been calls for increased research into and surveillance of wildlife trade and ...
The worldwide trade in exotic animals is a potential moderator for the global dispersion of infectio...
Zoonoses (singular, zoonosis) are diseases transmissible from animals to man. There are over 200 suc...
The expanding international wildlife trade, combined with a lack of surveillance for key animal dise...