Unravelling virus community ecology in bats through the integration of metagenomics and community ecology.
Michelle WillePublished in: Molecular ecology (2019)
The spillover of viruses from wildlife into agricultural animals or humans has profound socioeconomic and public health impact. Vampire bats, found throughout South America, feed directly on humans and other animals and are an important reservoir for zoonotic viruses, including rabies virus. This has resulted in considerable effort in understanding both the ecology of bat-borne viruses and the composition and associated correlates of the structure of entire virus communities in wildlife, particularly in the context of disease control interventions. In a From the Cover article in this issue of Molecular Ecology, Bergner et al. (2019) set out to reveal virus community dynamics in vampire bats by interrogating factors that affect the structure, diversity and richness of these communities. Due to the linkage of metagenomic sequence data with community ecology, this study represents an important advance in the field of virus ecology.
Keyphrases
- public health
- mental health
- healthcare
- physical activity
- risk assessment
- genome wide
- climate change
- disease virus
- electronic health record
- gene expression
- autism spectrum disorder
- intellectual disability
- dna methylation
- antibiotic resistance genes
- wastewater treatment
- human immunodeficiency virus
- human health
- anaerobic digestion
- antiretroviral therapy