Definition of Y. pestis
Y. pestis: Yersinia pestis, the bacteria that causes the bubonic
plague which in the year 541 (as the Black Death) and later in the
Middle Ages decimated Europe. The effects of the plague are described
in the nursery rhyme "We all fall down."
Y. pestis mainly infects rats and other rodents which are the
prime reservoir for the bacteria. Fleas are the
prime vectors carrying the bacteria from one
species to another. They bite rodents infected with Y.
pestis, then they bite people and so transmit the disease to
them.
Transmission of the plague to people can also occur from eating
infected animals such as squirrels. Once someone has the plague, they
can transmit it to another person
via aerosol droplets.
Plague occurs in the U.S. It is treatable with antibiotics but, if
not treated promptly, can promptly lead to death.
Yersinia is named after the Swiss bacteriologist Alexandre-
Emile-Jean Yersin (1863-1943) who identified it in 1894 after a trip
to Hong Kong looking for the agent that was killing thousands of
people in southern China. The bacteria was also discovered at the
same time by the
Japanese bacteriologist Shibasaburo Kitasako.
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