Houston Chronicle

Danger lurked at Wuhan markets

- By Raymond Zhong

In the two years before the pandemic began, markets in the Chinese city of Wuhan were selling nearly three dozen animal species that can harbor pathogens that jump to humans, researcher­s have found, shedding new light on the possible role of the wildlife trade in the coronaviru­s’ origins.

The researcher­s found sales in Wuhan of mink, palm civets and raccoon dogs, but they didn’t find sales of pangolins or bats, which have been suspected as possible sources of the coronaviru­s.

In all, the researcher­s documented sales of more than 47,000 animals across 38 species in Wuhan markets between May 2017 and November 2019. Thirty-three of the species previously have been infected with diseases or disease-bearing parasites that can affect humans, the researcher­s said.

China suspended the sale and consumptio­n of wild animals as the coronaviru­s began spreading rapidly early last year. The country’s wildlife trade played a key role in the SARS outbreak in the early 2000s.

A team of experts who led a World Health Organizati­on mission to Wuhan this year examined vendor records and other evidence from the city’s animal markets. But the team reached no firm conclusion­s about the markets’ role in the outbreak, or about the species through which the coronaviru­s might have spread to humans.

More than a year into the pandemic, the question of the virus’ origins remains largely unresolved. The Biden administra­tion last month announced a new push to investigat­e whether it could have accidental­ly leaked from a laboratory in Wuhan.

The study of the animal markets, published this week in the journal Scientific Reports, was written by authors affiliated with China West Normal University, Oxford University and the University of British Columbia.

Between 2017 and 2019, one of the researcher­s conducted monthly surveys of all 17 shops in Wuhan markets that sold live wild animals for food and pets. Seven of these shops were at the city’s Huanan seafood market. Several early COVID cases in Wuhan were discovered in people with connection­s to that market.

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