Wildlife trade drives animal-to-human pathogen transmission over 40 years

JÉRÔME M. W. GIPPET, COLIN J. CARLSON, TRISTAN KLAFTENBERGER, MATTÉO SCHWEIZER, EVAN A. ESKEW, MEREDITH L. GORE, AND CLEO BERTELSMEIER

SCIENCE 9 Apr 2026 Vol 392, Issue 6794 pp. 178-182

The wildlife trade affects a quarter of terrestrial vertebrates and creates opportunities for cross-species pathogen transmission, but its precise role in shaping animal-human pathogen exchange remains unclear. In our analysis of 40 years of global wildlife trade data, we show that traded mammals are 1.5-fold as likely to share pathogens with humans as nontraded mammals, and that illegal and live-animal trade further exacerbate pathogen sharing. Time spent in trade predicts the number of zoonotic pathogens that a wildlife species hosts. On average, a species shares an additional pathogen with humans for every 10 years it is traded.

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