Short Communication
Bats and birds as viral reservoirs: A physiological and ecological perspective

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142372Get rights and content

Highlights

  • Bats and birds are the natural hosts of many zoonotic pathogens.

  • Similar ecological and physiological traits predispose them to be viral reservoirs.

  • Some birds and bats close to urbans increases the chance of zoonotic outbreaks.

Abstract

The birds (class Aves) and bats (order Chiroptera, class Mammalia) are well known natural reservoirs of a diverse range of viruses, including some zoonoses. The only extant volant vertebrates, bats and birds have undergone dramatic adaptive radiations that have allowed them to occupy diverse ecological niches and colonize most of the planet. However, few studies have compared the physiology and ecology of these ecologically, and medically, important taxa. Here, we review convergent traits in the physiology, immunology, flight-related ecology of birds and bats that might enable these taxa to act as viral reservoirs and asymptomatic carriers. Many species of birds and bats are well adapted to urban environments and may host more zoonotic pathogens than species that do not colonize anthropogenic habitats. These convergent traits in birds and bats and their ecological interactions with domestic animals and humans increase the potential risk of viral spillover transmission and facilitate the emergence of novel viruses that most likely sources of zoonoses with the potential to cause global pandemics.

Keywords

Bird
Bat
Flight
Physiology
Immunology
Viral transmission

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