The Jerusalem Post

‘COVID-19 is not connected to bats’

Tel Aviv University’s Bat Lab hoping to restore winged mammals’ tarnished image

- • By MAYA MARGIT/The Media Line

The bat shivered in fear as it hung precarious­ly from Maya Weinberg’s gloved hand.

“His name is Zorro, and he is less than a year old,” said Weinberg, a veterinary doctor and PhD candidate at Prof. Yossi Yovel’s Bat Lab.

Located in Tel Aviv University’s I. Meier Segals Garden for Zoological Research, the Bat Lab hosts an eclectic range of Israeli biologists that specialize in groundbrea­king research.

As biologists, a cameraman and others crowded around to get a better look, Zorro’s trembling grew more violent. Weinberg gingerly put him back into the welcoming dark confines of a small carrier sitting on the nearby counter, away from prying eyes and the laboratory’s bright neon lights.

At the Bat Lab, Israel’s real-life Bat-men (and Bat-women) conduct research into a wide variety of bats, the only mammals capable of flying.

There are more than 1,400 species of bats worldwide; most are nocturnal and rarely come into contact with humans. Some are beneficial to their environmen­ts, since they eat a lot of insects and even help to disperse seeds and pollinate flowers.

Since the COVID-19 pandemic these unique winged creatures’ public image has taken a massive hit. So far scientists have not been able to find any evidence linking bats to the virus, but the connection has proven to be nearly impossible to dispel.

“Up until now there is no evidence to show a connection between bats and COVID-19,” Weinberg told The Media Line. “This idea bordered on conspiracy.”

“The way in which the scientific community echoed this theory was simply outrageous,” she argued. “It has done great damage to bats around the world, especially in China, where it damaged public perception of bats, which was already poor to begin with.”

A recent study led by Weinberg and Tel Aviv University postdoctor­al researcher Dr. Kelsey Moreno could have far-reaching implicatio­ns for discoverin­g the origins of COVID-19. The study, which was recently published in the Annals of the New York Academy of Science, found that sick bats maintain social distancing, possibly to prevent the spread of mass contagion in their colonies.

In order to observe their behavior, researcher­s monitored two colonies of Egyptian fruit bats: one living in captivity in an enclosure and the other living in its natural environmen­t. Researcher­s injected a bacteria-like protein into several bats in each colony, which simulated an immune response that generated symptoms of illness.

“We were very surprised to see that sick bats actively social distance,” Weinberg said. “We thought that the group would be the one to stay away from the sick bats – but instead it was the sick bats that actively stayed away from others in the colony. This is really not a typical behavior for a wild animal, which will generally attempt to hide its illness.”

Though the origins of COVID19

virus remain a mystery, some have speculated that a scientist in China who was studying coronaviru­ses in Wuhan may have leaked the strain, thereby causing a worldwide outbreak. The Wuhan Institute of Virology is notably located near the outbreak’s earliest known epicenter, but Beijing has vociferous­ly denied this theory.

However, Weinberg believes it is possible that a scientist who ventured deep into China’s wild to collect virus samples may have unwittingl­y unleashed it.

“As long as we maintain distance from bats and allow them to remain in their secluded natural habitats … then we won’t expose ourselves to pathogens for which we have no defense,” she stressed.

Other biologists at the Bat Lab are examining the biomechani­cs of bats, including their use of echolocati­on and sonar beams.

Doctoral candidate Ofri Eitan and his team are conducting behavioral experiment­s with bats inside an anechoic chamber, a room that is designed to absorb reflection­s of sound.

“In this flight room we use two methods that can help us understand the sensory behavior of bats,” Eitan told The Media Line. “These two techniques are motion tracking and the recording of the echolocati­on of bats.”

The room is fitted with 50 ultrasonic microphone­s and a system that tracks the bat’s motion as it flies. The goal is to observe the animal’s sensory behavior and gain a deeper understand­ing of how bats perceive their environmen­ts.

Eitan echoed Weinberg and stressed that bats were not connected to the pandemic.

“We’re trying to educate people and to show [them] that bats are much more incredible creatures than they thought,” he said.

Adi Rachum, who is studying for a master’s degree, is in charge of the Bat Lab’s imprinted colony, where dozens of fruit bats come and go as they please. Rachum and other students regularly feed the bats fresh fruit, providing them with an incentive to keep returning.

The room is dark, humid and resembles a cave. The goal is to mimic the animals’ natural environmen­t as closely as possible while also allowing scientists to conduct research.

There are several cameras spread throughout the cave, including a live feed that is accessible online 24/7.

“I put a chip on every bat that we release,” Rachum told The Media Line as she held a bat up for inspection. “It doesn’t hurt them and it helps us to definitive­ly identify them, which in turn helps with our research.”

Weinberg, a doctor of veterinary medicine who has specialize­d in bats for the past 12 years, hopes that the lab’s ongoing, pioneering research will eventually help to convince people that the winged creatures are not to be feared.

“They’re a very gentle, sociable and communicat­ive animal,” she said. “I worked with many different animals before arriving at bats. When you see how unique they are and learn the facts, then you look at them differentl­y.”

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