Potential for Ebola Transmission between Gorilla and Chimpanzee Social Groups
1. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig, Germany;
2. Wildlife Conservation Society, Bronx, New York 10460;
3. Lester E. Fisher Center for the Study and Conservation of Great Apes, Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago, Illinois 60614;
4. Department of Anthropology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794
Abstract:
Over the past decade Ebola hemorrhagic fever has emerged repeatedly in Gabon and Congo, causing numerous human outbreaks and massive die‐offs of gorillas and chimpanzees. Why Ebola has emerged so explosively remains poorly understood. Previous studies have tended to focus on exogenous factors such as habitat disturbance and climate change as drivers of Ebola emergence while downplaying the contribution of transmission between gorilla or chimpanzee social groups. Here we report recent observations on behaviors that pose a risk of transmission among gorilla groups and between gorillas and chimpanzees. These observations support a reassessment of ape‐to‐ape transmission as an amplifier of Ebola outbreaks.
Submitted June 17, 2006; Accepted October 17, 2006; Electronically published March 21, 2007
Keywords:
ape decline, epidemiology, frugivory, Congo, disease network, emergent disease.
Cited by
Online publication date: 1-Aug-2008.
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*Corresponding author; e‐mail: walsh@eva.mpg.de.



