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Characteristics and Risk Perceptions of Ghanaians Potentially Exposed to Bat-Borne Zoonoses through Bushmeat
ArticleAbstract: Emerging zoonotic pathogens from wildlife pose increasing public health threats globally. Bats, in pPalabras claves:Fruit bats, Ghana, outbreak management, public health development, ZoonosesAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Kamins A.O., Ntiamoa-Baidu Y., Restif O., Rowcliffe M., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusA framework for the study of zoonotic disease emergence and its drivers: Spillover of bat pathogens as a case study
ReviewAbstract: Many serious emerging zoonotic infections have recently arisen from bats, including Ebola, Marburg,Palabras claves:Bat, collaborative framework, emergence, zoonosisAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Breiman R.F., Dechmann D., Epstein J.H., Fahr J., Feldman K.S., Field H.E., Fooks A.R., Hayman D.T.S., Jones K.E., Kamins A.O., Leach M., MacGregor H., Ntiamoa-Baidu Y., Peel A.J., Restif O., Suu-Ire R.D., Waldman L., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusDemography of straw-colored fruit bats in Ghana
ArticleAbstract: Eidolon helvum is widely distributed across sub-Saharan Africa where it forms large, dense colonies.Palabras claves:Capture-recapture, Eidolon helvum, multistate model, Population dynamics, Survival, tooth cementumAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Fooks A.R., Hayman D.T.S., McCrea R., Restif O., Rowcliffe M., Suu-Ire R.D., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusExposure to bat-associated bartonella spp. Among humans and other animals, Ghana
OtherAbstract:Palabras claves:Autores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Kosoy M.Y., Mannerings A.O., Nyarko E., Osikowicz L.M., Restif O., Suu-Ire R.D., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusEndemic Lagos bat virus infection in Eidolon helvum
ArticleAbstract: Phylogenetic analyses suggest lyssaviruses, including Rabies virus, originated from bats. However, tPalabras claves:Capture-Mark-Recapture, Lyssavirus, multi-state model, rabies, straw-coloured fruit bat, time-series dataAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Feldman K.S., Fooks A.R., Hayman D.T.S., Horton D.L., McCrea R., Restif O., Rowcliffe M., Suu-Ire R.D., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusDomesticated animals as hosts of henipaviruses and filoviruses: A systematic review
ArticleAbstract: Bat-borne viruses carry undeniable risks to the health of human beings and animals, and there is groPalabras claves:Bat-borne viruses, Domesticated animals, Emerging zoonotic viruses, Filoviruses, HenipavirusesAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Garnier R., Glennon E.E., Osei-Amponsah R., Peel A.J., Restif O., Sbarbaro S., Suu-Ire R.D., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusMaternal antibody and the maintenance of a lyssavirus in populations of seasonally breeding African bats
ArticleAbstract: Pathogens causing acute disease and death or lasting immunity require specific spatial or temporal pPalabras claves:Autores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Feldman K.S., Fooks A.R., Hayman D.T.S., Horton D.L., Leach C., Luis A.D., Restif O., Suu-Ire R.D., Webb C.T., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusModel-guided fieldwork: Practical guidelines for multidisciplinary research on wildlife ecological and epidemiological dynamics
OtherAbstract: Infectious disease ecology has recently raised its public profile beyond the scientific community duPalabras claves:Field ecology, Infectious diseases, mathematical models, Statistical models, study design, Wildlife epidemiologyAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Bowen R., Fooks A.R., George D., Hayman D.T.S., Luis A.D., O'Shea T.J., Plowright R.K., Pulliam J.R.C., Restif O., Webb C.T., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusPersistence of multiple paramyxoviruses in a closed captive colony of fruit bats (Eidolon helvum)
ArticleAbstract: Bats have been identified as the natural hosts of several emerging zoonotic viruses, includ-ing paraPalabras claves:CHIROPTERA, henipavirus, Longitudinal study, Pararubulavirus, PteropodidaeAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Gibson L., Kemp J., Restif O., Ribas M.P., Suu-Ire R.D., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopusLongitudinal secretion of paramyxovirus rna in the urine of straw-coloured fruit bats (Eidolon helvum)
ArticleAbstract: The straw-coloured fruit bat (Eidolon helvum) is widespread in sub-Saharan Africa and is widely huntPalabras claves:CHIROPTERA, henipavirus, Paramyxoviridae, Persistence, Pteropodidae, RubulavirusAutores:Andrew Alexander Cunningham, Asumah S., Fleischer G., Gibson L., Jolma E.R., Languon S., Restif O., Suu-Ire R.D., Wood J.L.N.Fuentes:scopus