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Occurrence and transmission of flu-like illness among neighboring bonobo groups at Wamba

Author(s)
Ryu, HeungjinHill, David A.Sakamaki, TetsuyaGarai, CintiaTokuyama, NahokoFuruichi, Takeshi
Issued Date
2020-11
DOI
10.1007/s10329-020-00832-3
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/36791
Fulltext
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10329-020-00832-3
Citation
PRIMATES, v.61, pp.775 - 784
Abstract
Infectious diseases constitute one of the major threats to African great apes. Bonobos (Pan paniscus) may be particularly vulnerable to the transmission of infectious diseases because of their cohesive grouping and frequent social and sexual interactions between groups. Here we report two cases of a flu-like illness and possible transmission of the illness among neighboring wild bonobo groups at Wamba, DR Congo. The first flu-like outbreak started in the PE group on July 28, 2013, 2 days after they had encounters with the BI and PW groups. All PE members, except for one infant, subsequently developed flu-like symptoms, including coughing and running nose. The second flu-like outbreak occurred in the E1 group on October 14, 2013, after E1 had encountered the PE group and the two groups stayed together from October 7 to 11. Eleven out of the 15 observed party members developed symptoms over the next 4 days. The pathogens underlying the two outbreaks may have been related as two temporary immigrant females, who had previously shown symptoms while in the PE group, stayed briefly in the E1 group during the second outbreak, but did not show any symptoms.
Publisher
SPRINGER JAPAN KK
ISSN
0032-8332
Keyword (Author)
Flu-like illnessBonobosAfrican great apesIntergroup interactionsDisease transmissionWamba
Keyword
RESPIRATORY-DISEASEWILD CHIMPANZEESPAN-PANISCUSFRUIT ABUNDANCEEBOLA-VIRUSGROUP-SIZEPRIMATESGORILLAFORESTINFECTION

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