dc.creatorZeppelini, Caio Graco
dc.creatorAlmeida, Alzira Maria Paiva de
dc.creatorCordeiro-Estrela, Pedro
dc.date2017-05-15T13:24:34Z
dc.date2017-05-15T13:24:34Z
dc.date2016
dc.date.accessioned2023-09-26T20:59:24Z
dc.date.available2023-09-26T20:59:24Z
dc.identifierZEPPELINI, C. G.; DE ALMEIDA, A. M. P.; CORDEIRO-ESTRELA, P. Zoonoses As Ecological Entities: A Case Review of Plague. PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases, v. 10, n. 10, p. e0004949, 6 out. 2016.
dc.identifier1935-2735
dc.identifierhttps://www.arca.fiocruz.br/handle/icict/18840
dc.identifier10.1371/journal.pntd.0004949
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/8867351
dc.descriptionAs a zoonosis, Plague is also an ecological entity, a complex system of ecological interactions between the pathogen, the hosts, and the spatiotemporal variations of its ecosystems. Five reservoir system models have been proposed: (i) assemblages of small mammals with different levels of susceptibility and roles in the maintenance and amplification of the cycle; (ii) species-specific chronic infection models; (ii) flea vectors as the true reservoirs; (iii) Telluric Plague, and (iv) a metapopulation arrangement for species with a discrete spatial organization, following a source-sink dynamic of extinction and recolonization with naïve potential hosts. The diversity of the community that harbors the reservoir system affects the transmission cycle by predation, competition, and dilution effect. Plague has notable environmental constraints, depending on altitude (500+ meters), warm and dry climates, and conditions for high productivity events for expansion of the transmission cycle. Human impacts are altering Plague dynamics by altering landscape and the faunal composition of the foci and adjacent areas, usually increasing the presence and number of human cases and outbreaks. Climatic change is also affecting the range of its occurrence. In the current transitional state of zoonosis as a whole, Plague is at risk of becoming a public health problem in poor countries where ecosystem erosion, anthropic invasion of new areas, and climate change increase the contact of the population with reservoir systems, giving new urgency for ecologic research that further details its maintenance in the wild, the spillover events, and how it links to human cases.
dc.formatapplication/pdf
dc.languageeng
dc.rightsopen access
dc.subjectReservatórios de Doenças / Microbiologia
dc.subjectPeste / epidemiologia
dc.subjectFenômenos Ecológicos e Ambientais
dc.subjectPeste / transmissão
dc.subjectYersinia pestis / fisiologia
dc.subjectSaúde Pública / estatística & dados numéricos
dc.subjectZoonoses
dc.subjectYersinia pestis / isolamento e purificação
dc.titleZoonoses As Ecological Entities: A Case Review of Plague
dc.typeArticle


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