A meta-analysis suggesting that the relationship between biodiversity and risk of zoonotic pathogen transmission is idiosyncratic.
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One health - an ecological and evolutionary framework for tackling Neglected Zoonotic DiseasesFrontiers in research on biodiversity and diseaseSleeping sickness and its relationship with development and biodiversity conservation in the Luangwa Valley, ZambiaClimate change, biodiversity, ticks and tick-borne diseases: The butterfly effectEuropean bats as carriers of viruses with zoonotic potentialDeclines in large wildlife increase landscape-level prevalence of rodent-borne disease in AfricaOne Health, emerging infectious diseases and wildlife: two decades of progress?Ecosystem change and human health: implementation economics and policy.The consequences of human actions on risks for infectious diseases: a review.Global biogeography of human infectious diseases.Conservation, biodiversity and infectious disease: scientific evidence and policy implications.Does alteration in biodiversity really affect disease outcome? - A debate is brewing.Host specialization in ticks and transmission of tick-borne diseases: a review.Does life history mediate changing disease risk when communities disassemble?Non-random biodiversity loss underlies predictable increases in viral disease prevalenceNews feature: Many species, one health.Infectious diseases and their outbreaks in Asia-Pacific: biodiversity and its regulation loss matter.Does biodiversity protect humans against infectious disease?Effects of land use on plague (Yersinia pestis) activity in rodents in Tanzania.Host species composition influences infection severity among amphibians in the absence of spillover transmission.Targets to increase food production: One Health implications.Biodiversity inhibits parasites: Broad evidence for the dilution effectLose biodiversity, gain disease.Transmission ecology of rodent-borne diseases: New frontiers.Ecology. Is biodiversity good for your health?Disease Risk & Landscape Attributes of Tick-Borne Borrelia Pathogens in the San Francisco Bay Area, CaliforniaNo Observed Effect of Landscape Fragmentation on Pathogen Infection Prevalence in Blacklegged Ticks (Ixodes scapularis) in the Northeastern United States.Behavioural differences: a link between biodiversity and pathogen transmissionThe diversity-disease relationship: evidence for and criticisms of the dilution effect.Does biodiversity protect humans against infectious disease? Reply.Impact of Anthropogenic Disturbance on Native and Invasive Trypanosomes of Rodents in Forested Uganda.Avian species diversity and transmission of West Nile virus in Atlanta, Georgia.Global change, parasite transmission and disease control: lessons from ecology.Parasite responses to large mammal loss in an African savanna.Human infectious disease burdens decrease with urbanization but not with biodiversity.Conservation of biodiversity as a strategy for improving human health and well-being.Null expectations for disease dynamics in shrinking habitat: dilution or amplification?Modeling the Ebola zoonotic dynamics: Interplay between enviroclimatic factors and bat ecology.Declining ecosystem health and the dilution effectAnthropogenic impacts on Costa Rican bat parasitism are sex specific.
P2860
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P2860
A meta-analysis suggesting that the relationship between biodiversity and risk of zoonotic pathogen transmission is idiosyncratic.
description
2013 nî lūn-bûn
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2013年の論文
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2013年学术文章
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2013年学术文章
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2013年学术文章
@zh-cn
2013年学术文章
@zh-hans
2013年学术文章
@zh-my
2013年学术文章
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2013年學術文章
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name
A meta-analysis suggesting tha ...... transmission is idiosyncratic.
@en
A meta-analysis suggesting tha ...... transmission is idiosyncratic.
@nl
type
label
A meta-analysis suggesting tha ...... transmission is idiosyncratic.
@en
A meta-analysis suggesting tha ...... transmission is idiosyncratic.
@nl
prefLabel
A meta-analysis suggesting tha ...... transmission is idiosyncratic.
@en
A meta-analysis suggesting tha ...... transmission is idiosyncratic.
@nl
P2860
P921
P356
P1433
P1476
A meta-analysis suggesting tha ...... transmission is idiosyncratic.
@en
P2093
Daniel J Salkeld
Kerry A Padgett
P2860
P304
P356
10.1111/ELE.12101
P407
P577
2013-03-11T00:00:00Z