Emerging and Endemic Infections in Wildlife: Epidemiology, Ecology, & Management in a Changing World
A special issue of Pathogens (ISSN 2076-0817). This special issue belongs to the section "Emerging Pathogens".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 December 2023) | Viewed by 29927
Special Issue Editors
Interests: wildlife disease; veterinary epidemiology; disease ecology; wildlife management
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The importance of gaining a greater understanding of the infectious diseases of wild animal populations and the impact of emerging and re-emerging pathogens has never been so sharply in focus than in the current post-COVID19 world. Pathogens of wildlife populations that spillover to humans (zoonoses) and domesticated animals account for a significant proportion of the most pressing emergent and endemic diseases impacting human and veterinary health globally. The presence and spillback of antimicrobial and antiparasitic resistance in wildlife populations are an additional source of concern. It is essential that we place greater emphasis on identifying pathogens within wildlife populations, engaging in active and passive surveillance, gaining a greater understanding of the ecology and epidemiology of the disease, and developing early detection and warning systems and appropriate control approaches from local to international scales. Such monitoring and control approaches will benefit from being integrated into a broader One-Health approach, where the health of the wildlife populations themselves, as well as health of the broader ecosystem, is considered.
In this Special Edition, we encourage submissions relating to the identification, monitoring, ecology, or control of emerging and endemic wildlife diseases. This special issue encourages submissions related to bacterial (e.g. Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex; Salmonella sp.), fungal (e.g. Batrachochytrium sp., Pseudogymnoascus destructans), viral (e.g. Flaviviridae, Filoviridae, Coronaviridae, Caliciviridae), and parasitological (e.g. Echinococcus, Trichinella, Schistosoma) pathogens of wildlife hosts, especially emerging and endemic pathogens with known risks to veterinary and human population health. Authors are encouraged to consider how global change, including climatic, environmental, and societal factors, have influenced the epidemiology of such infections and challenges around their detection and control.
Dr. Andrew W. Byrne
Prof. Dr. Eric Morgan
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- wildlife infectious diseases
- emerging infectious diseases
- veterinary epidemiology
- wildlife management
- wild-domestic interface
- spillover infection
- zoonosis
- Tuberculosis
- wildlife parasites
- One Health
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