| Literature DB >> 28332127 |
Jennifer Caroline Cantlay1,2, Daniel J Ingram3, Anna L Meredith4.
Abstract
The overhunting of wildlife for food and commercial gain presents a major threat to biodiversity in tropical forests and poses health risks to humans from contact with wild animals. Using a recent survey of wildlife offered at wild meat markets in Malaysia as a basis, we review the literature to determine the potential zoonotic infection risks from hunting, butchering and consuming the species offered. We also determine which taxa potentially host the highest number of pathogens and discuss the significant disease risks from traded wildlife, considering how cultural practices influence zoonotic transmission. We identify 51 zoonotic pathogens (16 viruses, 19 bacteria and 16 parasites) potentially hosted by wildlife and describe the human health risks. The Suidae and the Cervidae families potentially host the highest number of pathogens. We conclude that there are substantial gaps in our knowledge of zoonotic pathogens and recommend performing microbial food safety risk assessments to assess the hazards of wild meat consumption. Overall, there may be considerable zoonotic risks to people involved in the hunting, butchering or consumption of wild meat in Southeast Asia, and these should be considered in public health strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Southeast Asia; infection risk; public health; wild meat; zoonotic pathogens
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28332127 PMCID: PMC5486459 DOI: 10.1007/s10393-017-1229-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecohealth ISSN: 1612-9202 Impact factor: 3.184
Wildlife Species Identified in Surveyed Establishments Across Malaysia Listed in Order of Decreasing Availability.
| Species |
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| Deer spp. (e.g. |
| Sunda Bearded Pig ( |
| Eurasian Wild Pig ( |
| Squirrel spp. (not specified) |
| Civet spp. (e.g. |
| Softshell Turtle (e.g. |
| Sumatran Serow ( |
| Flying Fox spp. (e.g. |
| Porcupine spp. (e.g. |
| Reticulated Python ( |
| Water Monitor Lizard ( |
| Estuarine Crocodile ( |
| Sun Bear ( |
| Long-tailed Macaque ( |
| Sunda Pangolin ( |
| Tiger ( |
| Red Junglefowl ( |
| Leopard ( |
| Asian Elephant ( |
| Monocled Cobra ( |
| Tortoise spp. (not specified) |
Potential Zoonotic Viral Pathogens from Wildlife Involved in the Wild Meat Trade.
| Virus | Wildlife host (taxonomic order or family) | |||||||
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| Suidae | Cervidae | Sciuridae | Viverridae | Caprinae | Pteropodidae | Hystricidae | Ursidae | |
| Avian paramyxovirus-1 | ||||||||
| Cercopithecine herpesvirus-1 | ||||||||
| Cowpox virus (Orthopoxvirus) | ||||||||
| Ebola virus subtype Reston |
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| Hepatitis E virus |
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| Highly pathogenic avian influenza virus |
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| Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus |
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| Nipah virus |
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| Orf virus (Parapoxvirus) |
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| Rabies virus and related Lyssaviruses |
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| Reoviruses (e.g. Melaka virus) |
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| SARS Coronavirus |
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| Simian foamy virus | ||||||||
| Simian type D retrovirus | ||||||||
| Simian virus 40 | ||||||||
| Swine influenza virus |
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Potential Zoonotic Bacterial Pathogens from Wildlife Involved in the Wild Meat Trade.
| Bacteria | Wildlife host (taxonomic order or family) | |||||||
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| Suidae | Cervidae | Sciuridae | Viverridae | Caprinae | Pteropodidae | Hystricidae | Ursidae | |
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Potential Parasitic Pathogens from Wildlife Involved in the Wild Meat Trade.
| Parasite | Wildlife host (taxonomic order or family) | |||||||
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| Suidae | Cervidae | Sciuridae | Viverridae | Caprinae | Pteropodidae | Hystricidae | Ursidae | |
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Figure 1Total numbers of viral, bacterial and parasitic pathogens reported in traded wildlife taxa.
Transmission Risks from the Potential Zoonotic Pathogens.
| Type of pathogen | Pathogen species | Human disease description | Potential transmission route from wildlife to human | Potential zoonotic risk from hunting, butchering or consumption | Referenced evidence of zoonotic infection to humans from wildlife taxa |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Virus |
(Newcastle disease) | Conjunctivitis or influenza-like disease | Contact with large amounts of virus from infected birds or their carcasses e.g. inhalation | Hunting Butchering | |
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| Herpes B virus disease | Transcutaneous: via animal bites or scratches Non-bite exposure: via mucous membranes or damaged skin | Hunting Butchering |
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| Cowpox | Transcutaneous: via animal bites, scratches or damaged skin | Hunting Butchering |
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| Ebola haemorrhagic fever | Contact with infected animals, body fluids and tissues | Hunting Butchering |
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| Hepatitis E | Foodborne Faeco-oral? Direct contact with infected animal blood? | Consumption Hunting? Butchering? |
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| Avian influenza | Contact with infected respiratory secretions Ingestion of blood or undercooked meat? Faeco-oral? | Hunting Butchering Consumption? | ||
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| Lymphocytic choriomeningitis | Transcutaneous: via animal bites Contact with infected animal excretions and secretions | Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Nipah virus infection | Ingestion of virus-contaminated food products Contact with infected urine or saliva or tissues | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Contagious ecthyma | Transcutaneous: via damaged skin or wounds | Hunting Butchering |
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| Rabies and rabies-related disease | Transcutaneous: via animal bites and scratches Non-bite exposure: via mucous membranes or damaged skin | Hunting Butchering |
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| Acute respiratory disease | Direct transmission from bat to human occurs via close contact? | Hunting? Butchering? |
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| SARS | Mucosal transmission: contact with virus-infected respiratory droplets Indirect transmission via virus-contaminated fomites | Hunting Butchering |
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| Simian foamy virus infection | Transcutaneous and mucosal: via animal bites, scratches and saliva splashes | Hunting Butchering |
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| Persistently seropositive humans without disease | Transcutaneous and mucosal: via animal bites, scratches, saliva splashes? | Hunting? Butchering? |
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| Role in human cancers? | Transcutaneous and mucosal: via animal bites, scratches and saliva splashes | Hunting Butchering |
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| Swine influenza | Contact with infected respiratory secretions | Hunting Butchering | ||
| Bacteria |
| Anthrax | Foodborne Transcutaneous: contact with contaminated carcasses and animal products Inhalation of spores | Consumption Butchering |
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| Cat scratch disease | Transcutaneous via animal bites and scratches | Hunting |
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| Brucellosis | Foodborne Transcutaneous and mucosal: contact with infected bodily fluids or tissues | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Campylobacter enteritis | Foodborne Faeco-oral | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Chlamydiosis | Transcutaneous and aerogenous: contact with infected secretions or excretions | Hunting Butchering | ||
| Psittacosis (from birds) | Inhalation of infected respiratory secretions or dried faeces | Hunting Butchering | |||
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| Dermatophilosis | Transcutaneous: direct contact with infected lesions | Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Edwardsiellosis | Foodborne Faeco-oral Transcutaneous: via wound | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Erysipeloid | Foodborne Transcutaneous: direct contact with infected animal products via damaged skin/wounds | Consumption Butchering |
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| Enterohaemorrhagic | Foodborne Faecal-oral | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Tularemia | Foodborne Transcutaneous or mucosal: direct contact with infected animals Inhalation of aerosolised bacteria | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
(Esmaeili et al.
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| Leptospirosis | Foodborne: urine-contaminated meat Transcutaneous or mucosal: contact with infected urine | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
(Masuzawa et al.
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| Tuberculosis | Foodborne Transcutaneous: direct contact via damaged skin/wounds Inhalation of aerosolised bacteria | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Other | Mycobacteriosis | Inhalation or ingestion of aerosolised bacteria | Butchering | ||
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| Pasteurellosis | Transcutaneous: via animal bites | Hunting |
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| Salmonellosis | Foodborne Faecal-oral Transcutaneous: via animal bites and scratches | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Shigellosis | Foodborne: faecal-contaminated meat Faeco-oral | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Streptococcosis | Transcutaneous: direct contact via damaged skin/wounds | Hunting Butchering |
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| Plague | Transcutaneous or mucosal: contact with infected animals or carcasses Inhalation of aerosolised bacteria | Hunting Butchering |
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| Other | Yersiniosis | Foodborne Faeco-oral | Consumption Hunting Butchering | ||
| Parasite |
| Cutaneous larva migrans | Transcutaneous: infective larvae that penetrate skin | Butchering | |
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| Anisakiasis | Foodborne: infective larvae in meat | Consumption | ||
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| Balantidiasis | Foodborne: faecal-contaminated meat Faeco-oral: ingestion of cysts | Consumption Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Cryptosporidiosis | Foodborne: faecal-contaminated meat Faeco-oral: ingestion of oocysts | Consumption Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Amoebiasis | Foodborne: faecal-contaminated meat Faeco-oral: ingestion of cysts | Consumption Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Giardiasis | Foodborne: faecal-contaminated meat Faeco-oral: ingestion of cysts | Consumption Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Gnathostomiasis | Foodborne: infective larvae in meat | Consumption |
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| Oesophagostomiasis | Foodborne: faecal-contaminated meat Faeco-oral: ingestion of filariform larvae | Consumption Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Pentastomiasis | Foodborne: infective larvae in meat Faeco-oral: ingestion of eggs Direct contact with infected animal tissues and respiratory secretions | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Sarcocystosis | Foodborne: infective sarcocysts in meat from intermediate host or faecal-contaminated meat from definitive host Faeco-oral: ingestion of oocysts from definitive host | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Sparganosis | Foodborne: infective larvae in meat from the second intermediate host | Consumption |
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| Strongyloidiasis | Transcutaneous or mucosal: infective larvae from faeces that penetrate skin or mucous membranes | Hunting Butchering | ||
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| Taeniasis | Foodborne: infective larvae in meat /viscera from intermediate host | Consumption |
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| Toxoplasmosis | Foodborne: infective cysts in meat from the intermediate host or faecal-contaminated meat from definitive host Faeco-oral: ingestion of oocysts from definitive host | Consumption Hunting Butchering |
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| Trichinellosis | Foodborne: infective cysts in meat | Consumption |
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| Trichuriasis | Foodborne: faecal-contaminated meat Faeco-oral: ingestion of embryonated eggs | Consumption Hunting Butchering |