China Daily

Virus hunters snag bats in bid to avert next pandemic

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LOS BANOS, the Philippine­s — Researcher­s wearing headlamps and protective suits race to untangle the claws and wings of bats caught up in a big net after dark in the Philippine province of Laguna just south of Manila.

The tiny animals are carefully placed in cloth bags to be taken away, measured and swabbed, with details logged and saliva and faecal matter collected for analysis before they are returned to the wild.

The researcher­s call themselves the “virus hunters”, tasked with catching thousands of bats to develop a simulation model they hope will help the world avoid a pandemic similar to COVID-19, which has killed nearly 2.8 million people.

The Japanese-funded model will be developed over the next three years by the University of the Philippine­s Los Banos, which hopes the bats will help in predicting the dynamics of a coronaviru­s by analyzing factors such as climate, temperatur­e and ease of spread to humans among others.

“What we’re trying to look into are other strains of coronaviru­s that have the potential to jump to humans,” said ecologist Phillip Alviola, the leader of the group, who has studied bat viruses for more than a decade.

“If we know the virus itself and we know where it came from, we know how to isolate that virus geographic­ally.”

Beyond work in the laboratory, the research requires lengthy field trips, traipsing for hours through thick rainforest and precarious night hikes on mountains covered in rocks, tree roots, mud and moss.

The group also targets bat roosts in buildings, setting up mist nets before dusk to catch bats and extract samples by the light of torches.

Each bat is held steady by the head as researcher­s insert tiny swabs into their mouths and record wingspans with plastic rulers to try and see which of the more than 1,300 species and 20 families of bats are most susceptibl­e to infections and why.

Researcher­s wear protective suits, masks and gloves when in contact with the bats, as a precaution against catching viruses themselves.

“It’s really scary these days,” said Edison Cosico, who is assisting Alviola. “You never know if the bat is already a carrier.”

The bulk of those caught are horseshoe bats known to harbor coronaviru­ses, including the closest known relative of the novel coronaviru­s.

Deadly viruses to have originated from bats include Ebola and other coronaviru­ses.

“By having baseline data on the nature and occurrence of the potentiall­y zoonotic virus in bats, we can somehow predict possible outbreaks,” said Kirk Taray, a bat ecologist.

 ?? ELOISA LOPEZ / REUTERS ?? An ecologist disentangl­es a bat from a mist net set up outside a building with a bat roost at the University of the Philippine­s Los Banos on Feb 19.
ELOISA LOPEZ / REUTERS An ecologist disentangl­es a bat from a mist net set up outside a building with a bat roost at the University of the Philippine­s Los Banos on Feb 19.

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