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Zoonotic and Anthroponotic Plasmodium spp. Circulation between Wild Primates and Indigenous Community, Peruvian Amazon, 2007–2020

  • ,
  • A. D. Greenwood
    ,
  • O. E. Cornejo
    ,
  • H. Alonso
    ,
  • M. L. Santolalla Robles
    ,
  • S. Montero
  • ,
  • Universidade Federal Rural da Amazônia (UFRA)
    ,
  • Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research (IZW)
    ,
  • Freie Universität Berlin
    ,
  • ProPeninsula and University of California at Santa Cruz
    ,
  • Universidad de Zaragoza
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Open access

Publication Information

Output type

Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Original language

English

Pages from-to (Number of pages)

Pages 707-719 (13 pages)

Journal (Volume, Issue Number)

Emerging Infectious Diseases (Volume 32, Issue 5)

Publication milestones

  • Published - 05/2026

Publication status

Published - 05/2026

ISSN

1080-6040

Publication IDs

  • Scopus: 105038519344
  • PubMed: 42116265

Abstract

Malaria transmission at the human–wildlife interface remains poorly characterized in the Amazon. We conducted a molecular survey of Plasmodium spp. in an Indigenous community (n = 141) and sympatric nonhuman primates (NHPs) (n = 341; 10 species) in the Peruvian Amazon during 2007–2020. By using nested or quantitative PCR (targeting cytb, cox3, and 18S rRNA genes) and sequencing, we estimated prevalence, parasite load, and genetic similarity. We detected Plasmodium in 43.3% of humans and 51.9% of NHPs. P. vivax/simium predominated in humans (42.1%), whereas P. brasilianum/malariae predominated in NHPs (24.6%). P. falciparum was rare in both hosts. Children ≤8 years of age showed higher parasite load than older persons. Bayesian phylogenies revealed >99.9% identity among human and NHP lineages, supporting shared Plasmodium lineages. NHP lineages showed low interannual variation. One third of human infections were asymptomatic. Our findings reveal hidden reservoirs and support integrating wildlife surveillance into Amazon malaria elimination strategies.

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