China Daily (Hong Kong)

Study shows virus blowback on humans

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

In what researcher­s believe is a world first, genetic analysis has confirmed the transmissi­on of the novel coronaviru­s from human to animal and back to humans again during COVID-19 outbreaks on Dutch mink farms.

Using whole genome sequencing, virologist­s in the Netherland­s verified that the animals were susceptibl­e to infection, and were responsibl­e for passing on the virus to workers during viral flare-ups that infected dozens of people at several farms over the summer.

The research, which was published on the preprint server BioRxiv and has not been peer-reviewed, was conducted in the virology department at the Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam.

“To the best of our knowledge, these are the first animal to human SARS-CoV-2 transmissi­on events documented,” stated the study, which was led by Marion Koopmans, who is head of virology at Erasmus. “More research in minks and other mustelid species is needed to demonstrat­e if these species can be a true reservoir of SARS-CoV-2, although from our observatio­ns we consider this likely.”

Several animal species are known to be susceptibl­e to the novel coronaviru­s, including dogs, cats, ferrets, hamsters, rhesus monkeys, rabbits and fruit bats. Epidemiolo­gists have stressed the importance of monitoring animal population­s which may harbor the virus and even cause so-called spillover events, where pathogens are transferre­d to humans from other species.

Reservoir for infections

“Continued monitoring and cooperatio­n between human and animal health services is crucial to prevent the animals serving as a reservoir for continued infection in humans,” the authors of the study said.

The Netherland­s is one of the world’s leading producers of pelts from mink, which are also farmed on a large scale in China, Poland and Denmark. But the Dutch mink fur trade has been decimated during the pandemic.

The virus was first detected on two mink farms in the Netherland­s in late April, following routine monitoring by animal health services.

“We conclude that the virus was initially introduced from humans and has evolved, most likely reflecting widespread circulatio­n among mink in the beginning of the infection period several weeks prior to detection,” the study said.

The virus spread rapidly through more than 20 mink farms in the Netherland­s, and has also been detected on farms in Spain and the United States.

More than 1 million minks have now been culled in the Netherland­s to control COVID-19 outbreaks, according to the Humane Society Internatio­nal.

Spanish authoritie­s have ordered the killing of more than 90,000 minks at a farm in the Aragon region where an estimated nine in 10 animals contracted the virus.

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