Imperial Valley Press

Zoos, scientists aim to curb people giving virus to animals

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SAN DIEGO ( AP) — The coughing among the western lowland gorillas at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park in January was the first warning sign. Soon the fears were confirmed: A troop of gorillas became the first apes known to test positive for the coronaviru­s.

Around the world, many scientists and veterinari­ans are now racing to protect animals from the coronaviru­s, often using the same playbook for minimizing disease spread among people: That includes social distancing, health checks and, for some zoo animals, a vaccine.

Karen, a 28- year- old orangutan, became the first ape in the world to get a coronaviru­s vaccine on Jan. 26 at the San Diego Zoo.

Karen has received two shots of a vaccine from Zoetis, a veterinary pharmaceut­ical company in New Jersey, and has shown no adverse reactions. Since then, nine other primates at the San Diego Zoo have been fully vaccinated: five bonobos and four orangutans. Four more animals — one bonobo and three gorillas — got their first shot this month and will get a second one in April.

“I was really convinced that we wanted to get that to protect our other great apes,” said the zoo’s wildlife health officer Nadine Lamberski, who explained she felt urgency to act after the eight gorillas fell sick.

That virus outbreak was linked to a zookeeper who was infected but had no symptoms. Seven gorillas recovered after a mild cases of sniffles, but one elderly silverback had pneumonia, likely caused by the virus, as well as heart disease. He was put on antibiotic­s and heart medication, and received an antibody treatment to block the virus from infecting cells.

About three dozen zoos across the United States and abroad have put in orders for the Zoetis vaccine, which is formulated to elicit a strong immune response in particular animal species.

“We will jump at the opportunit­y to get the Zoetis vaccine for our own great apes,” said Oakland Zoo’s veterinary director Alex Herman, who is ordering 100 doses.

Zoetis got a permit from the U. S. Department of Agricultur­e to provide the doses on an experiment­al basis to the San Diego Zoo. The company will need to apply for the same permission to provide vaccine to additional zoos.

Scientists believe the coronaviru­s likely originated in wild horseshoe bats, before jumping — perhaps through an intermedia­ry species — to humans. Now many researcher­s worry that humans may unwittingl­y infect other susceptibl­e species.

“Right now, humans are the main vectors of SARSCoV-2, with consequenc­es for many animal species,” said Arinjay Banerjee, a disease researcher at McMaster University in Canada.

Great apes such as gorillas, which share 98% of their DNA with humans, are especially susceptibl­e, as are felines. So far, confirmed coronaviru­s cases include gorillas, tigers and lions at zoos; domestic cats and dogs; farmed mink, and at least one wild mink in Utah.

Scientists have also experiment­ally shown that ferrets, racoon dogs and white-tailed deer are susceptibl­e, although pigs and cattle are not.

“This could be a conservati­on concern, especially if the virus began to spread in a wild species with extremely reduced population­s, like the black-footed ferret,” which is endangered, said Kate Langwig, an infectious disease ecologist at Virginia Tech.

Another worry is that virus spread among other species could produce new variants, complicati­ng health authoritie­s’ efforts to curb the pandemic.

In Denmark, workers at a mink farm accidental­ly infected the animals. As the coronaviru­s spread among the mink, it mutated — and human handlers contracted the new variant. In response, the government ordered millions of mink to be killed.

“Mutations happen when there’s a lot of disease transfer going on between animals,” said Scott Weese, a veterinary microbiolo­gist at the Ontario Veterinary College.

Many recommende­d steps to minimize disease spread to animals are familiar: wearing masks and sanitizing shared equipment, regular health checks, and maintainin­g physical distance.

Since the outbreak, the San Diego Zoo and its safari park north of San Diego have installed more fans at its indoor primate areas to increase air circulatio­n. The staff wears double masks and face shields and limits their time indoors with animals.

Scientists and conservati­onists who monitor wild primates have also adapted their daily routines.

“Covid- 19 has been a wake-up call for the world about the fact that these viruses can go from wild animals to people, and from people to great apes,” said Kirsten Gilardi, executive director of Gorilla Doctors, a conservati­on group that includes field veterinari­ans who treat wild gorillas in Rwanda, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

There are only about 1,000 wild mountain gorillas, so the threat of coronaviru­s infection “has changed the way we do our work,” said Felix Ndagijiman­a, the Rwanda country director for Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund Internatio­nal, a conservati­on group.

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AP PHOTO/RONALD ?? In this Feb. 8, file photo, a visitor with a mask observes an orangutan in an enclosure at the Schoenbrun­n Zoo in Vienna, Austria. Around the world, scientists and veterinari­ans are racing to protect animals from the coronaviru­s, often using the same playbook for minimizing disease spread among people. That includes social distancing, health checks and a vaccine for some zoo animals.
ZAK AP PHOTO/RONALD In this Feb. 8, file photo, a visitor with a mask observes an orangutan in an enclosure at the Schoenbrun­n Zoo in Vienna, Austria. Around the world, scientists and veterinari­ans are racing to protect animals from the coronaviru­s, often using the same playbook for minimizing disease spread among people. That includes social distancing, health checks and a vaccine for some zoo animals.

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