Gortazar, ChristianReperant, Leslie A.Kuiken, ThijsFuente, José de laBoadella, MarianaMartínez López, BeatrizRuiz Fons, FranciscoEstrada Peña, AgustinDrosten, ChristianMedley, GrahamOstfeld, RichardPeterson, TownsendVerCauteren, Kurt C.Menge, ChristianArtois, MarcSchultsz, ConstanceDelahay, RichardSerra Cobo, JordiPoulin, RobertKeck, FredericAguirre, Alonso A.Henttonen, HeikkiDobson, Andrew P.Kutz, SusanLubroth, JuanMysterud, Atle2020-01-212020-01-212014-06-191553-7366https://hdl.handle.net/2445/148353The number of pathogens known to infect humans is ever increasing. Whether such increase reflects improved surveillance and detection or actual emergence of novel pathogens is unclear. Nonetheless, infectious diseases are the second leading cause of human mortality and disability-adjusted life years lost worldwide [1], [2]. On average, three to four new pathogen species are detected in the human population every year [3]. Most of these emerging pathogens originate from nonhuman animal species.5 p.application/pdfengcc-by (c) Gortazar, Christian et al., 2014http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/esZoonosiBacteris patògensZoonosesPathogenic bacteriaCrossing the Interspecies Barrier: Opening the Door to Zoonotic Pathogensinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article6564692020-01-21info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess24945247