Bat Research Networks and Viral Surveillance: Gaps and Opportunities in Western Asia

Título

Bat Research Networks and Viral Surveillance: Gaps and Opportunities in Western Asia

Autor

Kendra L. Phelps, Luke Hamel, Nisreen Al-Hmoud, Shahzad Ali, Raşit Bilgin, Ketevan Sidamonidze, Lela Urushadze, William Karesh, Kevin J Olival

Descripción

Bat research networks and viral surveillance are assumed to be at odds due to seemingly conflicting research priorities. Yet human threats that contribute to declines in bat populations globally also lead to increased transmission and spread of bat-associated viruses, which may pose a threat to global health and food security. In this review, we discuss the importance of and opportunities for multidisciplinary collaborations between bat research networks and infectious disease experts to tackle shared threats that jeopardize bat conservation as well as human and animal health. Moreover, we assess research effort on bats and bat-associated viruses globally, and demonstrate that Western Asia has limited published research and represents a gap for coordinated bat research. The lack of bat research in Western Asia severely limits our capacity to identify and mitigate region-specific threats to bat populations and detect interactions between bats and incidental hosts that promote virus spillover. We detail a regional initiative to establish the first bat research network in Western Asia (i.e., the Western Asia Bat Research Network, WAB-Net), with the aim of integrating ecological research on bats with virus surveillance to find “win-win” solutions that promote bat conservation and safeguard public and animal health across the region.

Fecha

2019

Materia

Chiroptera, conservation, coronaviruses, Middle East, Zoonoses, One Health

Identificador

DOI: 10.3390/v11030240

Fuente

Viruses

Editor

MDPI AG

Cobertura

Microbiology

Idioma

EN

Archivos

https://socictopen.socict.org/files/to_import/pdfs/article 1239.pdf

Colección

Citación

Kendra L. Phelps, Luke Hamel, Nisreen Al-Hmoud, Shahzad Ali, Raşit Bilgin, Ketevan Sidamonidze, Lela Urushadze, William Karesh, Kevin J Olival, “Bat Research Networks and Viral Surveillance: Gaps and Opportunities in Western Asia,” SOCICT Open, consulta 17 de abril de 2026, https://www.socictopen.socict.org/items/show/1200.

Formatos de Salida

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