Hotspots of zoonotic disease risk from wildlife hunting and trade in the tropics
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Wiley Online Library
Materia
hunting infectious diseases mammals
Date
2024-01-23Referencia bibliográfica
Choo, J. et. al. Integrative Conservation. 2023;2:165–175. [https://doi.org/10.1002/inc3.34]
Sponsorship
Singapore Ministry of Education of Singapore Tier 1 grant, Grant/Award Number: A‐0004770‐00‐00; Ramón y Cajal grant, Grant/Award Number: RYC2021‐031737‐I; EMERGIA grant, Grant/Award Number: EMERGIA20_00252Abstract
Wildlife hunting and trade creates numerous direct human–animal contact
opportunities that can facilitate transmission of zoonotic diseases
pantropically. Yet, there is a lack of knowledge of which species and areas
have a high risk of zoonotic disease spillover due to wildlife hunting and
trade.We combined maps of hunting pressure, recent data sets on humanshared
pathogens, and trade volumes for 614 mammalian host species to
map zoonotic disease risk fromwildlife hunting and trade pantropically.We
also assessed the relationship between zoonotic disease risk from hunting
and probability of emerging zoonotic diseases using generalised least
square regression. We identified hotspots of zoonotic disease risk from
hunting in central America, China, and central Africa. When considering
wildlife trade frequency, high risk occurs in southern Africa and China.
Zoonotic disease risk from wildlife hunting aligns significantly with the risk
of zoonotic emerging infectious diseases, suggesting that hunting is a key
driver of zoonotic disease outbreaks of pandemic potential. Interventions
that regulate the hunting of host species and considers the socioeconomic
motivations behind hunting could reduce the risk of zoonotic disease
spillover.