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1 e brucellosis, one of the most common global zoonoses.
2 l switching events; 13 anthroponoses and two zoonoses.
3 st assessment of the risks posed by emerging zoonoses.
4 are responsible for the majority of emerging zoonoses.
5 aintenance of livestock pathogens, including zoonoses.
6 nt illnesses with a documented potential for zoonoses.
7 rience increased vulnerability to tick-borne zoonoses.
8 identified by this review, the majority were zoonoses.
9 ntal gene transfer can help predict emerging zoonoses.
10                  EID events are dominated by zoonoses (60.3% of EIDs): the majority of these (71.8%)
11 ts in understanding the ecology of bacterial zoonoses and antimicrobial resistance.
12 Evidence from naturally occurring retroviral zoonoses and cross-species infections by animal retrovir
13 igate mechanisms of transspecies movement of zoonoses and has great potential to aid in rapid public
14                      We briefly review these zoonoses and present a case of a renal transplant recipi
15 nfectious disease processes such as emerging zoonoses and vaccine-preventable diseases, [Formula: see
16 ted number of 'missing viruses' and 'missing zoonoses' and therefore of highest value for future surv
17                                     Emerging zoonoses are a growing threat to global health and have
18 h the circumstances surrounding these recent zoonoses are becoming clearer, the nature and timescale
19 -human animals, the transmission dynamics of zoonoses are necessarily influenced by the ecology of th
20                     These diseases are often zoonoses associated with wilderness areas, and establish
21 pe similar to the A(H3N2)v genotype, causing zoonoses at North American agricultural fairs, underline
22 row host tropism, reducing the occurrence of zoonoses but also impairing the development of optimal a
23               Thus, the absence of SIVcpzPts zoonoses cannot be explained by an insufficient primate
24 osis is one of the most prevalent tick-borne zoonoses caused by infection with Ehrlichia chaffeensis.
25 burden of disease, with endemic and enzootic zoonoses causing about a billion cases of illness in peo
26         Identifying the source of food-borne zoonoses (e.g. an animal reservoir or food product) is c
27       Defining prospective pathways by which zoonoses evolve and emerge as human pathogens is critica
28 ion and environmental changes on the risk of zoonoses for which there are epidemiological interaction
29 te one of the most important groups of viral zoonoses globally.
30 important pathogens in Africa, causing viral zoonoses in livestock and humans.
31 plasmosis (HGA), one of the major tick-borne zoonoses in the United States.
32 at cause brucellosis, one of the most common zoonoses in the world.
33 as natural hosts for several important viral zoonoses, including Ebola, Marburg, Nipah, Hendra, and r
34 he most frequent life-threatening tick-borne zoonoses, is caused by Ehrlichia chaffeensis that lacks
35                     The multihost ecology of zoonoses leads to complex dynamics, and analytical tools
36 and epidemiology of the flea-borne bacterial zoonoses mentioned above with an emphasis on recent adva
37 typhus, and plague are three flea-associated zoonoses of cats of concern in the USA.
38 e monetary and non-monetary impacts of these zoonoses on human health, agriculture and society must b
39                                              Zoonoses originating from wildlife represent a significa
40      Progress in understanding and combating zoonoses requires a new generation of models that addres
41         Effective prediction of future viral zoonoses requires an in-depth understanding of the heter
42  with the public-health risks posed by prion zoonoses such as bovine spongiform encephalopathy, has f
43                                   Flea-borne zoonoses such as plague (Yersinia pestis) and murine typ
44     Prior to emergence in human populations, zoonoses such as SARS cause occasional infections in hum
45                  In the case of rodent-borne zoonoses, there is strong conceptual support, but limite
46 atural forest also increases the threat from zoonoses, where new vector-borne pathogens spill over fr
47  orthologs of arenaviral host species enable zoonoses, whereas mice and rats are not infectable becau
48   Globally, it is one of the most widespread zoonoses, with 500,000 new cases reported each year.

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