Abstract

Bats host a number of pathogens that cause severe disease and onward transmission in humans and domestic animals. Some of these pathogens, including henipaviruses and filoviruses, are considered a concern for future pandemics. There has been substantial effort to identify these viruses in bats. However, the reservoir hosts for Ebola virus are still unknown and henipaviruses are largely uncharacterized across their distribution. Identifying reservoir species is critical in understanding the viral ecology within these hosts and the conditions that lead to spillover. We collated surveillance data to identify taxonomic patterns in prevalence and seroprevalence and to assess sampling efforts across species. We systematically collected data on filovirus and henipavirus detections and used a machine-learning algorithm, phylofactorization, in order to search the bat phylogeny for cladistic patterns in filovirus and henipavirus infection, accounting for sampling efforts. Across sampled bat species, evidence for filovirus infection was widely dispersed across the sampled phylogeny. We found major gaps in filovirus sampling in bats, especially in Western Hemisphere species. Evidence for henipavirus infection was clustered within the Pteropodidae; however, no other clades have been as intensely sampled. The major predictor of filovirus and henipavirus exposure or infection was sampling effort. Based on these results, we recommend expanding surveillance for these pathogens across the bat phylogenetic tree.

Highlights

  • Filoviruses and henipaviruses are zoonotic viruses of public health concern

  • The biology of Marburg, Nipah, and Hendra viruses within bats is poorly understood, and the Zaire strain of Ebola virus has yet to be isolated from a bat [7,8]

  • When we ignored sampling effort, we identified two statistically significant clades for filovirus reservoirs: the Pteropodidae, which had a high proportion of species with evidence of infection or exposure, and the Rhinolophoidea, which had a low proportion of species with evidence of infection or exposure (Figure 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Filoviruses and henipaviruses are zoonotic viruses of public health concern. Spillover events have occurred in Asia (Nipah virus), Australia (Hendra virus), and sub-Saharan Africa (Ebola virus, Marburg virus, undescribed henipaviruses) [1,2,3,4]. Bats are reservoir hosts for most these viruses, and epidemiological studies have linked bats to incidence cases in spillover events [1,2,5,6]. There are unanswered questions regarding bat-virus interactions and the reservoir status of bat species, despite these public health concerns. The biology of Marburg, Nipah, and Hendra viruses within bats is poorly understood, and the Zaire strain of Ebola virus has yet to be isolated from a bat [7,8]. Understanding which species harbor these viruses is key for guiding surveillance in wildlife and understanding the pathways of pathogen spillover [9]

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