Royal Oak Tribune

Scientists focus on bats for clues to prevent next pandemic

- By Christina Larson, Aniruddha Ghosal and Marcelo Silva De Sousa

RIO DE JANEIRO » Night began to fall in Rio de Janeiro’s Pedra Branca state park as four Brazilian scientists switched on their flashlight­s to traipse along a narrow trail of mud through dense rainforest. The researcher­s were on a mission: capture bats and help prevent the next global pandemic.

A few meters ahead, nearly invisible in the darkness, a bat made highpitche­d squeaks as it strained its wings against the thin nylon net that had ensnared it. One of the researcher­s removed the bat, which used its pointed teeth to bite her gloved fingers.

The November nighttime outing was part of a project at Brazil’s state-run Fiocruz Institute to collect and study viruses present in wild animals — including bats, which many scientists believe were linked to the outbreak of COVID-19.

The goal now is to identify other viruses that may be highly contagious and lethal in humans, and to use that informatio­n to devise plans to stop them from ever infecting people — to forestall the next potential global disease outbreak before it gets started.

In a highly connected world, an outbreak in one place endangers the entire globe, just as the coronaviru­s did. And the Brazilian team is just one among many worldwide racing to minimize the risk of a second pandemic this century.

To some, it might seem too soon to contemplat­e the next global outbreak, with the world still grappling with the devastatin­g fallout of the ongoing one. But scientists say it’s highly like that, without savvy interventi­on, another novel virus will jump from animal to human host and find the conditions to spread like wildfire.

As this pandemic has shown, modern transport can disperse the pathogen to all corners of the globe in a matter of hours and spread easily in densely populated cities.

It’s not a question of if, but of when, according to Dr. Gagandeep Kang, an infectious diseases expert at Christian Medical College at Vellore in southern India.

She pointed to previous research that found India was among the most likely places in the world for such a “spillover” event to occur, due to population density and increasing human and livestock incursion into its dense tropical forests teeming with wildlife.

It’s no coincidenc­e that many scientists are focusing attention on the world’s only flying mammals — bats.

Bats are thought to be the original or intermedia­ry hosts for multiple viruses that have spawned recent epidemics, including COVID-19, SARS, MERS, Ebola, Nipah virus, Hendra virus and Marburg virus. A 2019 study found that of viruses originatin­g from the five most common mammalian sources — primates, rodents, carnivores, ungulates and bats — those from bats are the most virulent in humans.

 ?? SILVIA IZQUIERDO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A researcher for Brazil’s state-run Fiocruz Institute takes an oral swab sample from a bat captured in the Atlantic Forest, at Pedra Branca state park, near Rio de Janeiro, Tuesday, Nov. 17.
SILVIA IZQUIERDO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A researcher for Brazil’s state-run Fiocruz Institute takes an oral swab sample from a bat captured in the Atlantic Forest, at Pedra Branca state park, near Rio de Janeiro, Tuesday, Nov. 17.

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