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250.
the word is
“questing”
: Ostfeld (2011), 23.

251.
Ostfeld and others call
“reservoir competence”
: Ostfeld (2011), 12.

258.

We know that walking into a small woodlot

: Ostfeld (2011), 9.

258.
Some people take “All life is connected” to be
: Ostfeld (2011), 6–7.

258.
a sort of cystlike stage known as a
“round body”
: Margulis et al. (2009), 52.

VI. Going Viral

265.

the sap of leaves infected with tobacco mosaic disease

: Levine (1992), 2.

267.

encouraged by the study of the so-called ‘filterable virus’ agents

: Zinsser (1934), 63.

267.

Here, as in bacterial disease

: Zinsser (1934), 64.

268.

a piece of bad news wrapped up in a protein

: Quoted in Crawford (2000), 6.

273.

pain, redness, and slight swelling
” around the bite
: Sabin and Wright (1934), 116.

273.
They called it simply “the B virus”
: Sabin and Wright (1934), 133.

278.

no case
” of human infection with the virus
: Engel et al. (2002), 792.

288.

a virus in search of a disease

: Weiss (1988), 497.

295.
the most “efficient” parasite, in Pasteur’s view
: Pasteur’s view as summarized and reaffirmed by Rene Dubos, quoted in Ewald (1994), 188–89.

295.

a more perfect mutual tolerance

: Zinsser (1934), 61.

295.

In general terms, where two organisms have developed

: Burnet (1940), 37.

296.

A disease organism that kills its host quickly

: McNeill (1976), 9.

297.

started jumping up and down, biting other animals

: Quoted in ProMED-mail post, April 22, 2011.

297.

He barked like a dog,
” his wife recalled later
: Quoted in ProMED-mail post, April 1, 2011.

298.
Austin was an “ardent acclimatizer”
: Fenner and Ratcliffe (1965), 17.

299.
causing what was called a “spectacular epizootic”
: Fenner and Ratcliffe (1965), 276.

301.

Laboratory experiments showed that all field strains

: Fenner (1983), 265.

304.

weave together
” the two approaches
: Anderson and May (1979), 361.

304.

unsupported statements
” in medical and ecological textbooks
: Anderson and May (1982), 411.

306.

Our major conclusion,
” wrote Anderson and May
: Anderson and May (1982), 424.

VII. Celestial Hosts

315.

Pigs are a common host for the virus

:
New Straits Times,
January 7, 1999.

316.

It became known as a one-mile barking cough

: Hume Field was the expert, quoted in a
60 Minutes
(of Australia) television interview.

327.

touching dead animals
” looked like it might be important
: Montgomery et al. (2008), 1529, Table 2.

328.

increases the risk for wider spread

: Gurley et al. (2007), 1036.

331.

Owners viewed the fruit bats as a nuisance

: Luby et al. (2006), 1892.

344.

the revenge of the rain forest

: Preston (1994), 289.

350.
Do bats have a different “set point”
: Calisher et al. (2006), 536.

351.

Emphasis, sometimes complete emphasis, on nucleotide sequence

: Calisher et al. (2006), 541.

351.

we are simply waiting for the next

: Calisher et al. (2006), 540.

351.

The natural reservoir hosts of these viruses have not yet been identified

: Calisher et al. (2006), 539.

356.

is only one of many such cave populations

: Towner et al. (2009), 2.

372.

Patient C was the father of a 4-year-old girl

: Leroy et al. (2009), 5.

372.

Thus, virus transmission may have occurred

: Leroy et al. (2009), 6.

373.

In fact, it is highly likely that several other persons

: Leroy et al. (2009), 5.

VIII. The Chimp and the River

385.

profoundly depressed
” in number
: Gottlieb et al. (1981), 251.

387.

strikingly similar to the syndrome of immunodeficiency

: Pitchenik et al. (1983), 277.

387.
written about as the man who “carried the virus out of Africa”
: e.g., Wikipedia, “Gaëtan Dugas,” citing Auerbach et al. (1984), although Auerbach et al. do not make that assertion.

387.
vain but charming, even “gorgeous” in some eyes
:
Shilts (1987), 47.

388.

I’ve got gay cancer

: Shilts (1987), 165.

388.

Although the cause of AIDS is unknown

: Auerbach et al. (1984), 490.

388.
to the more resonant “Patient Zero” of his book
: Shilts (1987), 23.

389.

I’d better go home to die

: Shilts (1987), 6.

391.

AIDS could not be caused by a conventional bacterium

: Montagnier (2000), 42.

393.

more than 4000 individuals in the world

: Levy et al. (1984), 840.

393.

Our data cannot reflect a contamination

: Levy et al. (1984), 842.

396.

In 1985, the highest rates of HIV were reported

: Essex and Kanki (1988), 68.

396.

must have evolved mechanisms

: Essex and Kanki (1988), 68.

396.

not close enough to make it likely that SIV

: Essex and Kanki (1988), 69.

399.
HUMAN AIDS VIRUS NOT FROM MONKEYS
: Mulder (1988), 396.

399.
sampled by the Japanese team, because it was “of Kenyan origin”
: Fukasawa et al. (1988), 457.

401.
revealed that the virus was “endemic” among them
: Murphey-Corb et al. (1986), 437.

402.

These results suggest that SIV
sm
has infected macaques

: Hirsch et al. (1989), 389.

414.
with material direct from a “vaccinal sore”
: Willrich (2011), 181.

415.

The origin of the AIDS virus is of no importance

: Quoted in Curtis (1992), 21.

415.

It’s distracting, it’s nonproductive, it’s confusing

: Quoted in Curtis (1992), 21.

416.

The controversy surrounding the source of the Nile

: Hooper (1999), 4.

421.

Our estimation of divergence times

: Worobey et al. (2008), 663.

423.

the most persuasive evidence yet

: Weiss and Wrangham (1999), 385.

428.

We show here that the SIV
cpzPtt
strain that gave rise

: Keele at al. (2006), 526.

428.

In humans, direct exposure to animal blood

: Hahn et al. (2000), 611.

428.

The likeliest route of chimpanzee-to-human transmission

: Sharp and Hahn (2010), 2492.

429.

a hard mission field,
” according to one Swedish missionary
: Quoted in Martin (2002), 25.

430.

a low-risk type of prostitution

: Pepin (2011), 90.

437.

Until recently, the Bakweles have been using chimps

: From the typewritten, unpublished report of my anonymous source in Yokadouma.

464.

survived their own AIDS-like pandemic

: Cohen (2002), 15.

477.

that SIV
cpz
has a substantial negative impact

: Keele et al. (2009), 515.

479.

The Congo contains various health institutions

: Beheyt (1953), quoted in Pepin (2011), 164.

479.

The large number of patients and the small quantity of syringes

: Beheyt (1953), quoted in Pepin (2011), 164.

481.

consisted of thousands of asymptomatic free women

: Pepin (2011), 161.

485.
“there must have been a very effective amplification mechanism”
: Pepin (2011), 196.

IX. It Depends

496.

From the ecological point of view an outbreak

: Berryman (1987), 3.

497.

When
Homo sapiens
passed the six-billion mark

: Wilson (2002), 86.

498.

seems to imply a dominant force

: Myers (1993), 240.

512.

The first criterion is the most obvious

: Burke (1998), 7.

 

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