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Potential Mammalian Filovirus Reservoirs
Author(s) -
A. Townsend Peterson,
Darin S. Carroll,
James N. Mills,
Karl M. Johnson
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
emerging infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.54
H-Index - 226
eISSN - 1080-6059
pISSN - 1080-6040
DOI - 10.3201/eid1012.040346
Subject(s) - ebola virus , natural reservoir , filoviridae , ebolavirus , clade , outbreak , biology , virology , marburg virus , mammal , disease reservoir , evolutionary biology , zoology , phylogenetics , virus , viral disease , genetics , gene , paramyxoviridae
Ebola and Marburg viruses are maintained in unknown reservoir species; spillover into human populations results in occasional human cases or epidemics. We attempted to narrow the list of possibilities regarding the identity of those reservoir species. We made a series of explicit assumptions about the reservoir: it is a mammal; it supports persistent, largely asymptomatic filovirus infections; its range subsumes that of its associated filovirus; it has coevolved with the virus; it is of small body size; and it is not a species that is commensal with humans. Under these assumptions, we developed priority lists of mammal clades that coincide distributionally with filovirus outbreak distributions and compared these lists with those mammal taxa that have been tested for filovirus infection in previous epidemiologic studies. Studying the remainder of these taxa may be a fruitful avenue for pursuing the identity of natural reservoirs of filoviruses.

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