Litcius/Paper detail

Illegal Wildlife Trade and Emerging Infectious Diseases: Pervasive Impacts to Species, Ecosystems and Human Health

Elizabeth R. Rush, Erin Dale, A. Alonso Aguirre

2021Animals77 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Emerging infectious disease (EID) events can be traced to anthropogenic factors, including the movement of wildlife through legal and illegal trade. This paper focuses on the link between illegal wildlife trade (IWT) and infectious disease pathogens. A literature review through Web of Science and relevant conference proceedings from 1990 to 2020 resulted in documenting 82 papers and 240 identified pathogen cases. Over 60% of the findings referred to pathogens with known zoonotic potential and five cases directly referenced zoonotic spillover events. The diversity of pathogens by taxa included 44 different pathogens in birds, 47 in mammals, 16 in reptiles, two in amphibians, two in fish, and one in invertebrates. This is the highest diversity of pathogen types in reported literature related to IWT. However, it is likely not a fully representative sample due to needed augmentation of surveillance and monitoring of IWT and more frequent pathogen testing on recovered shipments. The emergence of infectious disease through human globalization has resulted in several pandemics in the last decade including SARS, MERS, avian influenza H1N1,and Ebola. We detailed the growing body of literature on this topic since 2008 and highlight the need to detect, document, and prevent spillovers from high-risk human activities, such as IWT.

Topics & Concepts

WildlifeWildlife tradePandemicInfectious disease (medical specialty)BiodiversityBiologyEbola virusEmerging infectious diseaseWildlife diseaseHuman healthDiseaseBiosecurityHuman pathogenGeographyEnvironmental healthEcologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)VirologyOutbreakMedicineGeneticsPathologyBacteriaZoonotic diseases and public healthAnimal Disease Management and EpidemiologyViral Infections and Vectors