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Heng SP, Letchumanan V, Deng CY, et al.Vibrio vulnificus: An environmental and clinical burden. Front. Microbiol. 2017; 8: 997.

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Vezzulli L, Grande C, Reid PC, et al.Climate influence on Vibrio and asso-ciated human diseases during the past half-century in the coastal North Atlantic. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2016; 113: E5062–71.

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King M, Rose L, Fraimow H, Nagori M, Danish M, Doktor K. Vibrio vulnificus infections from a previously nonen-demic area. Ann. Intern. Med. 2019; 171: 520–1

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Ali M, Nelson AR, Lopez AL, Sack DA. Updated global burden of cholera in endemic countries. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 2015; 9. DOI:10.1371/journal.pntd.0003832.

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Vibrio Species Causing Vibriosis. U.S. Centers Dis. Control. https://www.cdc.gov/vibrio/index.html (accessed Oct 21, 2020).

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Vibrio Illnesses After Hurricane Katrina — Multiple States, August–September 2005. CDC MMWR 2005; 54: 928–31.

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Patricola CM, Wehner MF. Anthro-pogenic influences on major tropical cyclone events. Nature 2018; 563: 339–46.

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Escobar LE, Ryan SJ, Stewart-Ibarra AM, et al. A global map of suitability for coastal Vibrio cholerae under current and future climate conditions. Acta Trop2015; 149: 202–11.

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Baker-Austin C, Trinanes JA, Taylor NGH, Hartnell R, Siitonen A, Martinez-Urtaza J. Emerging Vibrio risk at high latitudes in response to ocean warming. Nat Clim Chang 2013; 3: 73–7.

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Hartwick MA, Urquhart EA, Whistler CA, Cooper VS, Naumova EN, Jones SH. Forecasting seasonal vibrio parahaemo-lyticus concentrations in new England shellfish. Int J Environ Res Public Health2019; 16: 4341.