First to report implications for
animal-human disease transmission
Date: May 24, 2016
Source: Florida Atlantic University
Although Cercopithecus monkeys, a
widely distributed genus in Africa, usually have a discerning palate for fruits
and leaves, they are opportunistic omnivores that sometimes consume lizards,
snakes, birds and mice. These forest-dwelling primates share habitat and food
resources with bats, which are known reservoirs for zoonotic diseases such as
Ebola, Marburg and Henipa viruses as well as bacteria and parasites that can be
spread between animals and humans. This has led researchers to hypothesize that
primate consumption of fruits contaminated with an infected bat's saliva or
feces facilitates zoonotic disease transmission. Scientists estimate that more
than six out of every 10 infectious diseases in humans are spread from animals.
Primates and bats also may
interact directly, but their behavioral and predator-prey interactions are
poorly documented, and detailed reports of their interactions have been rare,
until now. Researchers in the Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters at
Florida Atlantic University initiated a study of Cercopithecus predation on
bats after observing monkeys preying on two different bat species in Gombe
National Park in Tanzania. They are the first to document monkeys consuming
bats with photos and video. Observations from this study suggest an alternative
pathway for bat-to-monkey disease transmission that has implications for
zoonotic disease transmission to humans. The study titled, "Bat Predation
by Cercopithecus Monkeys: Implications for Zoonotic Disease Transmission,"
is published in the current issue of the journal EcoHealth.
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