Selected article for: "global community and yellow fever"

Author: Amanda D. Melin; Mareike C. Janiak; Frank Marrone; Paramjit S. Arora; James P. Higham
Title: Comparative ACE2 variation and primate COVID-19 risk
  • Document date: 2020_4_11
  • ID: bieqw3x1_1
    Snippet: In late 2019 a novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 emerged in China. In humans, this virus can lead to the respiratory disease COVID-19, which can be fatal 1,2 . Since then, SARS-CoV-2 has spread around the world, causing widespread mortality, and with major impacts on societies and economies. While the virus and its resulting disease represent a major humanitarian disaster, they also represent a potential existential risk to our closest living relative.....
    Document: In late 2019 a novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 emerged in China. In humans, this virus can lead to the respiratory disease COVID-19, which can be fatal 1,2 . Since then, SARS-CoV-2 has spread around the world, causing widespread mortality, and with major impacts on societies and economies. While the virus and its resulting disease represent a major humanitarian disaster, they also represent a potential existential risk to our closest living relatives, the nonhuman primates. Transmission of diseases such as Ebola and yellow fever from humans has previously caused mass mortality in wild populations of nonhuman primates [3] [4] [5] [6] , raising concerns among the global conservation community with respect to the impact of the current pandemic 7 .

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