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  • Persistent infections support maintenance of a coronavirus in a population of Australian bats (Myotis macropus)

    Author(s)
    Jeong, J
    Smith, CS
    Peel, AJ
    Plowright, RK
    Kerlin, DH
    Mcbroom, J
    Mccallum, H
    Griffith University Author(s)
    McBroom, James
    McCallum, Hamish
    Peel, Alison J.
    Year published
    2017
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Understanding viral transmission dynamics within populations of reservoir hosts can facilitate greater knowledge of the spillover of emerging infectious diseases. While bat-borne viruses are of concern to public health, investigations into their dynamics have been limited by a lack of longitudinal data from individual bats. Here, we examine capture–mark–recapture (CMR) data from a species of Australian bat (Myotis macropus) infected with a putative novel Alphacoronavirus within a Bayesian framework. Then, we developed epidemic models to estimate the effect of persistently infectious individuals (which shed viruses for extensive ...
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    Understanding viral transmission dynamics within populations of reservoir hosts can facilitate greater knowledge of the spillover of emerging infectious diseases. While bat-borne viruses are of concern to public health, investigations into their dynamics have been limited by a lack of longitudinal data from individual bats. Here, we examine capture–mark–recapture (CMR) data from a species of Australian bat (Myotis macropus) infected with a putative novel Alphacoronavirus within a Bayesian framework. Then, we developed epidemic models to estimate the effect of persistently infectious individuals (which shed viruses for extensive periods) on the probability of viral maintenance within the study population. We found that the CMR data analysis supported grouping of infectious bats into persistently and transiently infectious bats. Maintenance of coronavirus within the study population was more likely in an epidemic model that included both persistently and transiently infectious bats, compared with the epidemic model with non-grouping of bats. These findings, using rare CMR data from longitudinal samples of individual bats, increase our understanding of transmission dynamics of bat viral infectious diseases.
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    Journal Title
    Epidemiology and Infection
    Volume
    145
    Issue
    10
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1017/S0950268817000991
    Subject
    Health services and systems
    Public health
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/348936
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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