Kuwait Times

On the menu at China virus market: Rats and wolf pups

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SHANGHAI: The food market where China’s deadly virus surfaced was a smorgasbor­d of exotic wildlife ranging from wolf pups to species linked to previous pandemics such as civets, according to vendor informatio­n and a Chinese media report. The Huanan Seafood Market in the central city of Wuhan came under greater scrutiny yesterday as Chinese officials said that the virus which has so far killed nine people and infected hundreds may have originated in a wild animal sold at the food emporium.

Past deadly epidemics have been blamed on wild animals - Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome (SARS) was linked to Chinese consumptio­n of civet meat - setting Chinese authoritie­s up for potential embarrassm­ent if lax supervisio­n of wildlife traffickin­g is found at fault in the latest outbreak. A price list circulatin­g on China’s Internet for a business at the Wuhan market lists a menagerie of animals or animalbase­d products including live foxes, crocodiles, wolf puppies, giant salamander­s, snakes, rats, peacocks, porcupines, camel meat and other game - 112 items in all.

“Freshly slaughtere­d, frozen and delivered to your door,” said the price list for the vendor, “Wild Game Animal Husbandry for the Masses”. Gao Fu, director of the Chinese centre for disease control and prevention, said in Beijing yesterday that authoritie­s believe the virus likely came from “wild animals at the seafood market” though the exact source remains undetermin­ed.

China bans the traffickin­g of a number of wild species or requires special licenses, but regulation­s are loose for some species if they are commercial­ly farmed. AFP was unable to directly confirm the authentici­ty of the price list. Phone calls to the vendor went unanswered, and attempts to connect to its social media accounts were rejected. The Beijing News published a photo Tuesday showing the same vendor’s now-shuttered storefront, as authoritie­s in white hazmat suits milled about. The paper also quoted other merchants as saying trade in wildlife took place up until the market was shuttered for disinfecti­on shortly after the outbreak. A number of the early sufferers of the virus, now known as the 2019 Novel Coronaviru­s (2019-nCoV), were employees of the market.

Many exotic species are still widely consumed in China or other Asian countries where they are considered a delicacy - like the civet or some rats or bats - or for purported health benefits that are unproven by science. But this brings growing human health risks, said Christian Walzer, executive director of the US-based Wildlife Conservati­on Society’s Health Program. Walzer said 70 percent of all new infectious diseases come from wildlife, with habitat encroachme­nt increasing the chances of pathogens spreading.

“Wildlife markets offer a unique opportunit­y for viruses to spill over from wildlife hosts,” he said. “It is essential to invest resources not only into discoverin­g new viruses, but more importantl­y, in determinin­g the epidemiolo­gical drivers of... (the) spillover, amplificat­ion, and spread of infectious diseases.”

 ?? — AFP ?? WUHAN, China: In this file photograph taken on Jan 11, 2020, members of staff of the Wuhan hygiene emergency response team leave the closed Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.
— AFP WUHAN, China: In this file photograph taken on Jan 11, 2020, members of staff of the Wuhan hygiene emergency response team leave the closed Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.

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