subject
English, 06.04.2020 00:24 kiasiab17

PASSAGE
Nearly 75 percent of new, or emerging, infectious diseases in people were first spread by animals. Indeed, half of all germs known to cause human disease come from other animals. Some sources were birds, bats, and other types of wildlife. Livestock1 and pet animals have spread many other diseases. Scientists refer to the infections that people pick up from animals as being zoonotic (ZOO-oh-NOT-ik).

The germs and other infectious agents that cause these diseases are known as pathogens. Most are microbes2 such as viruses or bacteria; others include fungi — even teeny-tiny worms and ticks.

In zoonotic diseases, animals serve as a pathogen’s host.3 Over time, some long-term hosts no longer become sickened. When a virus commonly lives inside an animal without harming it, that host is now called a reservoir. For instance, birds — especially ducks — have evolved into a natural reservoir for flu viruses.

Pathogens move among hosts continuously, explains Jonathan Epstein. A veterinary epidemiologist, he’s a scientist who studies the spread of disease in animals. (He works at EcoHealth Alliance in New York City.) Many pathogens will encounter a human host. If that person’s immune system had never yet encountered the microbe, it will have built up no immunity to fight the germ. That lucky pathogen can now survive and spread to others.

[5]Understanding how pathogens spread between species can help scientists not only combat current disease outbreaks, but also prevent or lessen future ones.

T
For instance, Epstein specializes in viruses whose reservoir is bats. He has been on the trail of numerous viruses that have spilled over into people from these mammals. Among them: Nipah.

This viral disease started in Southeast Asia during the late 1990s. Workers at a massive pig farm began noticing troubling symptoms. Their pigs came down with a loud, barking cough and behaved strangely. They twitched and developed muscle spasms.4 Some pigs died. Tragically, farm workers also started getting sick. In severe cases, people entered a coma and died.

No virus can survive long outside a living organism. So Epstein teamed up with other experts to hunt the reservoir animal that had allowed Nipah to enter pigs.

It turned out to be a bat species. It normally stays away from people, living in the nearby rainforest. But when farmers planted an orchard of mango trees close to their pigpens, bats came by to dine on the juicy fruit. Those bats shed germy saliva, urine, and feces onto the pigpens below them.

[10]From 1998 to 1999, Nipah sickened more than 250 people. More than four out of every 10 of these people died. One million pigs were killed and disposed of to stop the disease’s spread.

It is important not to blame wildlife for diseases, says Kristine Smith, a wildlife veterinarian who works for EcoHealth Alliance. Instead, she argues, people must become aware of the risks of being in close proximity5 to animals and adjust their behavior accordingly.

QUESTION
How does the author’s discussion of the shared virus between the pigs and the bats help us understand animals’ role in human disease?

ansver
Answers: 2

Another question on English

question
English, 22.06.2019 07:20
Read the excerpt from the time traveler's guide to elizabethan england.simon forman, who does attend plague sufferers, is a rare exception: this is because he has himself survived the disease and believes he cannot catch it again. however, his remedy amounts to little more than avoiding eating onions and keeping warm. he has a recipe for getting rid of the plague sores that will afflict you afterward if you survive the disease; but that is a very big "if.” it seems the best advice is provided by nicholas bownd in his book medicines for the plague: "in these dangerous times god must be our only defense.”which lines best summarize the excerpt?
Answers: 1
question
English, 22.06.2019 08:20
Select the correct text in the passage
Answers: 1
question
English, 22.06.2019 08:50
If music be the food of love, play on; give me excess of it, that, surfeiting, the appetite may sicken, and so die. that strain again! it had a dying fall: o, it came o'er my ear like the sweet sound, that breathes upon a bank of violets, stealing and giving odour! now read the excerpt from "the love song of j. alfred prufrock." for i have known them all already, known them all: have known the evenings, mornings, afternoons, i have measured out my life with coffee spoons; i know the voices dying with a dying fall beneath the music from a farther room. what does the phrase "dying fall" most likely mean in both excerpts
Answers: 3
question
English, 22.06.2019 09:30
In about one hundred words, discuss two ways through which an author can show how a theme develops. consider how themes reveal culture.
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
PASSAGE
Nearly 75 percent of new, or emerging, infectious diseases in people were first spread...
Questions