PetriKey

Concept

Zoonosis

Infection transmitted from animals to humans

zoh-oh-NOH-sis

public-healthzoonosistransmissionreservoirepidemiology

High-yield clue

A zoonosis is any infection whose reservoir is an animal, transmitted to humans directly or via a vector.

Overview

A zoonosis is an infectious disease that spreads naturally from vertebrate animals to humans, with the animal serving as a reservoir. The concept frames many high-yield organisms by their animal source.

Classification

  • Public-health concept
  • Animal-reservoir transmission
  • Direct or vector-borne routes

Lab & identification clues

  • Reservoir is the animal host that maintains the pathogen
  • Vectors (ticks, fleas, mosquitoes) can bridge animal to human
  • Spillover events introduce animal pathogens to people

Associations

  • Rabies, brucellosis, and tularemia as zoonotic examples
  • Occupational and food/water exposure vocabulary
  • Overlaps with vector-borne and foodborne framing

Commonly confused with

  • Zoonosis vs vector-borne disease
  • Reservoir vs vector

Your notes

Original microbiology concept summary. Sources checked: OpenStax Microbiology 2e, NCBI Bookshelf Medical Microbiology, and CDC/WHO topic pages where applicable; reviewed 2026-06. Educational only; no diagnosis, treatment selection, infection-control instructions, or specimen-handling guidance.

OpenStax: Microbiology 2e concept foundationssourceNCBI Bookshelf: Medical Microbiology general conceptssourceCDC: CDC public-health concept pagessource