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Biotechnology tools in disease surveillance and monitoring in free ranging wildlife: A review

Diseases have become an important challenge, with more than 60% of recent emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) increasingly originating from wildlife due to increasing urbanization, hunting, globalized trade, habitat loss and other environmental changes. This continuous treat of EIDs to biodiversity...

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Format: Conference Proceeding
Published: 2018
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MARC

LEADER 00000njm a2000000a 4500
001 oai:repository.ui.edu.ng:123456789/12607
042 |a dc 
720 |a Omonona, A. O.  |e author 
720 |a Oko, P. A.  |e author 
720 |a Adetuga, A. T.  |e author 
720 |a Coker, O. M.  |e author 
260 |c 2018 
520 |a Diseases have become an important challenge, with more than 60% of recent emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) increasingly originating from wildlife due to increasing urbanization, hunting, globalized trade, habitat loss and other environmental changes. This continuous treat of EIDs to biodiversity represents a major crisis and challenge for public health, though there is an international agreement to slow down or halt this menace. Therefore, wildlife disease monitoring and surveillance has been increasing in recent years in an effort to identify and characterize emerging zoonoses. However, traditional monitoring techniques remain problematic due to detection of new disease events, identification of the level and distribution of diseases endemically present in a population, and the invasive nature of some survey techniques. Hence, there is an urgent need for alternative and efficient techniques for large-scale biodiversity monitoring. The disciplines of molecular biology, genomics and evolutionary biology, in particular, are providing insights into the origin of the outbreak, transmissibility, implications and virulence of the pandemic strain. This review therefore, highlights improved free ranging wildlife disease surveillance using biotechnological techniques and highlights genetic tools which could have important socio-economic benefits, including reducing long-term disease management costs, protecting biodiversity and ecosystem services. 
024 8 |a 2735-9301. 
024 8 |a ui_inpro_omonona_biotechnology_2018 
024 8 |a In: Ogunjimi, A. A., Oyeleke, O. O., Adeyemo, A. I., Ejidike, B. N., Orimaye, J. O., Ojo, V. A., Adetola, B. O. and Arowosafe, F. C. (Eds.). Achieving Sustainable Development Goals: The Role of Wildlife 
024 8 |a https://repository.ui.edu.ng/handle/123456789/12607 
653 |a Disease Surveillance 
653 |a Biotechnology 
653 |a Wildlife Diseases 
653 |a Zoonoses 
245 0 0 |a Biotechnology tools in disease surveillance and monitoring in free ranging wildlife: A review