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Dive into the research topics where Craig S. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Craig S. Smith.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2008

Henipavirus Infection in Fruit Bats (Pteropus giganteus), India

Jonathan H. Epstein; Vibhu Prakash; Craig S. Smith; Peter Daszak; Amanda McLaughlin; Greer Meehan; Hume E. Field; Andrew A. Cunningham

We tested 41 bats for antibodies against Nipah and Hendra viruses to determine whether henipaviruses circulate in pteropid fruit bats (Pteropus giganteus) in northern India. Twenty bats were seropositive for Nipah virus, which suggests circulation in this species, thereby extending the known distribution of henipaviruses in Asia westward by >1,000 km.


Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses | 2009

Continuing progress towards a unified nomenclature for the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza viruses: Divergence of clade 2·2 viruses

Ruben O. Donis; Gavin J. D. Smith; I. Brown; I. Capua; G. Cattoli; H. Chen; Nancy J. Cox; C. Davis; Ron A. M. Fouchier; Rebecca Garten; Yi Guan; Alan J. Hay; Yoshihiro Kawaoka; John Mackenzie; John W. McCauley; E. Mumford; C. Olsen; M. Perdue; Charles J. Russell; Craig S. Smith; Derek J. Smith; Yuelong Shu; Masato Tashiro; D. Vijaykrishna; Robert G. Webster

Correspondence: Dr Ruben O. Donis, Molecular Virology and Vaccines Branch, Influenza Division, NCIRD, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road, NE, MS-G16, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA. Email: [email protected] Dr Gavin Smith, State Key Laboratory of Emerging Infectious Diseases, Department of Microbiology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China. E-mail: [email protected] *WHO ⁄ OIE ⁄ FAO H5N1 Evolution Working Group members and collaborators can be found in the Appendix.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Natural Hendra Virus Infection in Flying-Foxes - Tissue Tropism and Risk Factors

Lauren Goldspink; Daniel Edson; Miranda E. Vidgen; John Bingham; Hume E. Field; Craig S. Smith

Hendra virus (HeV) is a lethal zoonotic agent that emerged in 1994 in Australia. Pteropid bats (flying-foxes) are the natural reservoir. To date, HeV has spilled over from flying-foxes to horses on 51 known occasions, and from infected horses to close-contact humans on seven occasions. We undertook screening of archived bat tissues for HeV by reverse transcription quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). Tissues were tested from 310 bats including 295 Pteropodiformes and 15 Vespertilioniformes. HeV was detected in 20 individual flying-foxes (6.4%) from various tissues including spleen, kidney, liver, lung, placenta and blood components. Detection was significantly higher in Pteropus Alecto and P. conspicillatus, identifying species as a risk factor for infection. Further, our findings indicate that HeV has a predilection for the spleen, suggesting this organ plays an important role in HeV infection. The lack of detections in the foetal tissues of HeV-positive females suggests that vertical transmission is not a regular mode of transmission in naturally infected flying-foxes, and that placental and foetal tissues are not a major source of infection for horses. A better understanding of HeV tissue tropism will strengthen management of the risk of spillover from flying-foxes to horses and ultimately humans.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Satellite telemetry and long-range bat movements.

Craig S. Smith; Jonathan H. Epstein; Andrew C. Breed; Raina K. Plowright; Kevin J. Olival; Carol de Jong; Peter Daszak; Hume E. Field

Background Understanding the long-distance movement of bats has direct relevance to studies of population dynamics, ecology, disease emergence, and conservation. Methodology/Principal Findings We developed and trialed several collar and platform terminal transmitter (PTT) combinations on both free-living and captive fruit bats (Family Pteropodidae: Genus Pteropus). We examined transmitter weight, size, profile and comfort as key determinants of maximized transmitter activity. We then tested the importance of bat-related variables (species size/weight, roosting habitat and behavior) and environmental variables (day-length, rainfall pattern) in determining optimal collar/PTT configuration. We compared battery- and solar-powered PTT performance in various field situations, and found the latter more successful in maintaining voltage on species that roosted higher in the tree canopy, and at lower density, than those that roost more densely and lower in trees. Finally, we trialed transmitter accuracy, and found that actual distance errors and Argos location class error estimates were in broad agreement. Conclusions/Significance We conclude that no single collar or transmitter design is optimal for all bat species, and that species size/weight, species ecology and study objectives are key design considerations. Our study provides a strategy for collar and platform choice that will be applicable to a larger number of bat species as transmitter size and weight continue to decrease in the future.


Journal of Zoo and Wildlife Medicine | 2007

PLASMA BIOCHEMISTRY AND HEMATOLOGIC VALUES FOR WILD-CAUGHT FLYING FOXES (PTEROPUS GIGANTEUS) IN INDIA

Amanda McLaughlin; Jonathan H. Epstein; Vibhu Prakash; Craig S. Smith; Peter Daszak; Hume E. Field; Andrew A. Cunningham

Abstract Although bats of the genus Pteropus are important ecologically as pollinators and natural hosts for zoonotic pathogens, little is known about their basic physiology. Hematology and plasma biochemistries were determined from wild-caught flying foxes (Pteropus giganteus) in northern India (n = 41). Mean lymphocyte differential count was higher for juveniles than adults. Mean platelet count was lower than previously reported. No hemoparasites were observed. No differences were observed between plasma biochemistry values of male and female bats, juveniles and adults, or lactating and nonlactating females. Variation in aspartate aminotransferase (AST) was seen based on body condition score. Blood urea nitrogen and cholesterol concentrations were lower in P. giganteus than other mammalian groups, but were consistent with those reported from other Pteropus species. Alanine aminotransferase and AST concentrations were higher than those reported for Pteropus vampyrus, a closely related species. This study provides basic physiologic information that can be used in future health and disease studies of Indian flying foxes.


Acta Chiropterologica | 2010

Sampling small quantities of blood from microbats

Craig S. Smith; Carol de Jong; Hume E. Field

School of Veterinary Science, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia Australian Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre for Emerging Infectious Diseases, St. Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia Biosecurity Queensland, Queensland Primary Industries and Fisheries, Department of Employment, Economic Development and Innovation, Yeerongpilly, Queensland 4105, Australia Corresponding author: E-mail: [email protected]


Ecohealth | 2016

Coronavirus Infection and Diversity in Bats in the Australasian Region

Craig S. Smith; C. E. de Jong; J. Meers; J. Henning; Lin-Fa Wang; Hume E. Field

Abstract Following the SARS outbreak, extensive surveillance was undertaken globally to detect and identify coronavirus diversity in bats. This study sought to identify the diversity and prevalence of coronaviruses in bats in the Australasian region. We identified four different genotypes of coronavirus, three of which (an alphacoronavirus and two betacoronaviruses) are potentially new species, having less than 90% nucleotide sequence identity with the most closely related described viruses. We did not detect any SARS-like betacoronaviruses, despite targeting rhinolophid bats, the putative natural host taxa. Our findings support the virus-host co-evolution hypothesis, with the detection of Miniopterus bat coronavirus HKU8 (previously reported in Miniopterus species in China, Hong Kong and Bulgaria) in Australian Miniopterus species. Similarly, we detected a novel betacoronavirus genotype from Pteropus alecto which is most closely related to Bat coronavirus HKU9 identified in other pteropodid bats in China, Kenya and the Philippines. We also detected possible cross-species transmission of bat coronaviruses, and the apparent enteric tropism of these viruses. Thus, our findings are consistent with a scenario wherein the current diversity and host specificity of coronaviruses reflects co-evolution with the occasional host shift.


Journal of General Virology | 2015

Novel paramyxoviruses in Australian flying-fox populations support host–virus co-evolution

Miranda E. Vidgen; Carol de Jong; Karrie Rose; Jane Hall; Hume E. Field; Craig S. Smith

Understanding the diversity of henipaviruses and related viruses is important in determining the viral ecology within flying-fox populations and assessing the potential threat posed by these agents. This study sought to identify the abundance and diversity of previously unknown paramyxoviruses (UPVs) in Australian flying-fox species (Pteropus alecto, Pteropus scapulatus, Pteropus poliocephalus and Pteropus conspicillatus) and in the Christmas Island species Pteropus melanotus natalis. Using a degenerative reverse transcription-PCR specific for the L gene of known species of the genus Henipavirus and two closely related paramyxovirus genera Respirovirus and Morbillivirus, we identified an abundance and diversity of previously UPVs, with a representative 31 UPVs clustering in eight distinct groups (100 UPVs/495 samples). No new henipaviruses were identified. The findings were consistent with a hypothesis of co-evolution of paramyxoviruses and their flying-fox hosts. Quantification of the degree of co-speciation between host and virus (beyond the scope of this study) would strengthen this hypothesis.


Epidemiology and Infection | 2017

Persistent infections support maintenance of a coronavirus in a population of Australian bats ( Myotis macropus )

J. Jeong; Craig S. Smith; Alison J. Peel; Raina K. Plowright; Douglas H. Kerlin; J. Mcbroom; Hamish McCallum

SUMMARY Understanding viral transmission dynamics within populations of reservoir hosts can facilitate greater knowledge of the spillover of emerging infectious diseases. While bat-borne viruses are of concern to public health, investigations into their dynamics have been limited by a lack of longitudinal data from individual bats. Here, we examine capture–mark–recapture (CMR) data from a species of Australian bat (Myotis macropus) infected with a putative novel Alphacoronavirus within a Bayesian framework. Then, we developed epidemic models to estimate the effect of persistently infectious individuals (which shed viruses for extensive periods) on the probability of viral maintenance within the study population. We found that the CMR data analysis supported grouping of infectious bats into persistently and transiently infectious bats. Maintenance of coronavirus within the study population was more likely in an epidemic model that included both persistently and transiently infectious bats, compared with the epidemic model with non-grouping of bats. These findings, using rare CMR data from longitudinal samples of individual bats, increase our understanding of transmission dynamics of bat viral infectious diseases.


Zoonoses and Public Health | 2017

No Evidence of Hendra Virus Infection in the Australian Flying-fox Ectoparasite Genus Cyclopodia.

Miranda E. Vidgen; Daniel Edson; A. F. Van Den Hurk; Hume E. Field; Craig S. Smith

Hendra virus (HeV) causes potentially fatal respiratory and/or neurological disease in both horses and humans. Although Australian flying‐foxes of the genus Pteropus have been identified as reservoir hosts, the precise mechanism of HeV transmission has yet to be elucidated. To date, there has been limited investigation into the role of haematophagous insects as vectors of HeV. This mode of transmission is particularly relevant because Australian flying‐foxes host the bat‐specific blood‐feeding ectoparasites of the genus Cyclopodia (Diptera: Nycteribiidae), also known as bat flies. Using molecular detection methods, we screened for HeV RNA in 183 bat flies collected from flying‐foxes inhabiting a roost in Boonah, Queensland, Australia. It was subsequently demonstrated that during the study period, Pteropus alecto in this roost had a HeV RNA prevalence between 2 and 15% (95% CI [1, 6] to [8, 26], respectively). We found no evidence of HeV in any bat flies tested, including 10 bat flies collected from P. alecto in which we detected HeV RNA. Our negative findings are consistent with previous findings and provide additional evidence that bat flies do not play a primary role in HeV transmission.

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Carol de Jong

Cooperative Research Centre

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J. Meers

University of Queensland

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Andrew C. Breed

Veterinary Laboratories Agency

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Miranda E. Vidgen

University of the Sunshine Coast

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Andrew A. Cunningham

Zoological Society of London

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