Wildlife populations are affected by a series of emerging diseases, some of which pose a significant threat to their conservation. They can also be reservoirs of pathogens that threaten domestic animal and human health. In this paper, we review the ecology of two viruses that have caused significant disease in domestic animals and humans and are carried by wild fruit bats in Asia and Australia. The first, Hendra virus, has caused disease in horses and/or humans in Australia every five years since it first emerged in 1994. Nipah virus has caused a major outbreak of disease in pigs and humans in Malaysia in the late 1990s and has also caused human mortalities in Bangladesh annually since 2001. Increased knowledge of fruit bat population dynam...
Henipaviruses cause fatal infection in humans and domestic animals. Transmission from fruit bats, th...
Bat-borne viruses carry undeniable risks to the health of human beings and animals, and there is gro...
Amongst the 60 viral species reported to be associated with bats, 59 are RNA viruses, which are pote...
Wildlife populations are affected by a series of emerging diseases, some of which pose a significant...
Wildlife populations are affected by a series of emerging diseases, some of which pose a significant...
Two related, novel, zoonotic paramyxoviruses have been described recently. Hendra virus was first re...
Two related, novel, zoonotic paramyxoviruses have been described recently. Hendra virus was first re...
Hendra virus, a novel member of the family Paramyxovirus that has emerged from bats in Australia, ca...
Pteropid bats (flying foxes), species of which are the probable natural host of both Hendra and Nipa...
Hendra virus is a recently emerged zoonotic agent in Australia. Since first described in 1994, the v...
The highly lethal Hendra and Nipah viruses have been described for little more than a decade, yet wi...
The highly lethal Hendra and Nipah viruses have been described for little more than a decade, yet wi...
Nipah virus (NiV) is a recently emerged zoonotic virus that causes severe disease in humans. The res...
Henipaviruses cause fatal infection in humans and domestic animals. Transmission from fruit bats, th...
This study investigated the seroepidemiology of Hendra virus in a spectacled flying-fox (Pteropus co...
Henipaviruses cause fatal infection in humans and domestic animals. Transmission from fruit bats, th...
Bat-borne viruses carry undeniable risks to the health of human beings and animals, and there is gro...
Amongst the 60 viral species reported to be associated with bats, 59 are RNA viruses, which are pote...
Wildlife populations are affected by a series of emerging diseases, some of which pose a significant...
Wildlife populations are affected by a series of emerging diseases, some of which pose a significant...
Two related, novel, zoonotic paramyxoviruses have been described recently. Hendra virus was first re...
Two related, novel, zoonotic paramyxoviruses have been described recently. Hendra virus was first re...
Hendra virus, a novel member of the family Paramyxovirus that has emerged from bats in Australia, ca...
Pteropid bats (flying foxes), species of which are the probable natural host of both Hendra and Nipa...
Hendra virus is a recently emerged zoonotic agent in Australia. Since first described in 1994, the v...
The highly lethal Hendra and Nipah viruses have been described for little more than a decade, yet wi...
The highly lethal Hendra and Nipah viruses have been described for little more than a decade, yet wi...
Nipah virus (NiV) is a recently emerged zoonotic virus that causes severe disease in humans. The res...
Henipaviruses cause fatal infection in humans and domestic animals. Transmission from fruit bats, th...
This study investigated the seroepidemiology of Hendra virus in a spectacled flying-fox (Pteropus co...
Henipaviruses cause fatal infection in humans and domestic animals. Transmission from fruit bats, th...
Bat-borne viruses carry undeniable risks to the health of human beings and animals, and there is gro...
Amongst the 60 viral species reported to be associated with bats, 59 are RNA viruses, which are pote...