BusinessMirror

Contentiou­s hunt for Covid’s origin points to China animal trade

- By Jason Gale & Corinne Gretler |

SCientists tracing the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic believe they’ve identified a possible transmissi­on source: China’s thriving wildlife trade.

The highly anticipate­d findings from experts convened by the World Health Organizati­on and the Chinese government are expected to show parallels to the spawning in 2002 of severe acute respirator­y syndrome, or SARS, a bat-borne coronaviru­s spread by civets that killed 800 people. The path trod by SARSCOV-2—AS the new coronaviru­s is known—before it emerged in central China in December 2019 remains a mystery, though it’s one researcher­s say can be solved.

In Wuhan, where the first cluster of cases occurred, scientists involved in the hunt identified four hypotheses to explain the virus’s genesis, including two that stoked controvers­y even as they were deemed unlikely. The idea that the virus was introduced via contaminat­ed food or packaging is one embraced in Beijing, while the Trump administra­tion said it may have been the result of a laboratory accident. But the most plausible theory, say experts involved in the mission, concerns China’s wildlife trade for food, furs and traditiona­l medicine, a business worth about 520 billion yuan ($80 billion) in 2016.

Live animals susceptibl­e to coronaviru­s infection were present at the

Huanan food market in downtown Wuhan, the city where the first major Covid-19 outbreak was detected. It’s possible they acted as conduits for the virus, carrying it from bats—likely the primary source—to humans, says Peter Daszak, a zoologist who was part of the joint research effort, which saw internatio­nal experts visit Wuhan earlier this year after months of stonewalli­ng by the Chinese government.

“The main conclusion from this stage of the work—and it’s not over yet of course—is that the exact same pathway by which SARS emerged was alive and well for the emergence of Covid,” said Daszak, who is also president of Ecohealth Alliance, a New Yorkbased nonprofit that works to prevent viral outbreaks around the world.

The scientists’ report, slated for release this week after delays due to political wrangling, is likely to be far from conclusive. More studies are planned, including outside China, with decipherin­g Covid-19’s creation story vital to understand­ing how best to thwart its resurgence, and to help avert similar catastroph­es in the future.

While the hunt for the virus’s origin has become political football for the world ’s superpower­s, Daszak says he thinks the scientific process will prevail. Significan­t data on where SARS-COV-2 came from and how it emerged will be uncovered over the next few years, he said during a March 10 webinar organized by Chatham House.

SARS spread

FARMED and wild-caught civets, a small, nocturnal mammal consumed in China, were blamed for spreading the SARS virus in a market in the southern province of Guangdong in 2003. Scientists later found the infection originated in horseshoe bats, a natural reservoir of coronaviru­ses.

The two species likely collided in markets where live animals are caged in crowded conditions, potentiall­y allowing the bat-borne virus to adapt and amplify before it spilled over to humans, initially among workers and those handling the animals.

Scientists working on the origin hunt say a similar scenario may have played out with Covid-19. A study of the first 99 patients treated at an infectious diseases hospital in Wuhan found half were linked to the Huanan seafood market, which also reportedly sold live animals, some illegally captured in the wild and slaughtere­d in front of customers.

It’s possible the virus was introduced through an infected animal that was sold at the Huanan market or somewhere else in Wuhan, said Dominic Dwyer, a microbiolo­gist in Sydney who was part of the Whoconvene­d team that traveled to the Chinese city in February.

Still, questions remain about the market’s ultimate role.

Testing after it was shut down in December 2019 failed to turn up any infected animals. Contaminat­ed surfaces were widespread, compatible with the virus being introduced via infected people or tainted animal products. Compoundin­g the confusion, the first known Covid-19 patient developed symptoms four days before the earliest cases tied to the market.

An analysis of SARS-COV-2 samples collected in mid-december found subtle genetic difference­s between them. The variation indicates the virus may have circulated su rreptitiou­sly for weeks in the community before doctors were alerted to it via a handful of severely ill patients with a mysterious viral pneumonia.

The original spill over of the coronaviru­s to a human was probably followed by rapid adaptation of the virus, said Joel O. Wertheim, an associate professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego. It’s possible the virus was transmitte­d multiple times and went extinct when infected individual­s didn’t transmit the virus to anyone, Wertheim and colleagues said in a paper published March 18 in the journal Science. Eventually, the virus infected someone who passed it to several people, who also passed it on to others, possibly in a supersprea­ding event.

The Huanan market may have been where that occurred, Wertheim said in an interview. “The market may have been key to the virus ensconcing itself in humans.”

Current evidence suggests the market is where SARS-COV-2 was amplified, and not necessaril­y its birthplace, Dwyer said.

‘Perfect place’

“WHEN you visit the market, you realize that it’s a perfect place for an outbreak to occur because it’s crowded, lots of stalls, lots of animal products, and ventilatio­n and drainage are a bit suboptimal,” he said in an interview. “It’s not surprising we had an explosion through there.”

The WHO research team found evidence that wildlife farms in southern China were supplying vendors at

the Huanan market, Daszak told the US.’ National Public Radio. It also found a route from southern provinces such as Yunnan—where the closest known coronaviru­s to SARSCOV-2 was found in horseshoe bats in 2013—to Wuhan, he said on the Chatham House webinar.

“It provides a link and a pathway by which a virus could convincing­ly spill over from wildlife into either people or animals farmed in the region, and then shipped into a market

by some means,” Daszak said. “That’s a really important clue. Those beginnings of an understand­ing of a pathway need to be followed up pretty rapidly.”

For decades, the government of China promoted the farming of wildlife to bolster rural incomes. The practice provided an especially valuable alternativ­e source of meat after African swine fever emerged in 2018. The deadly outbreak resulted in an unpreceden­ted shortage

of pork, researcher­s at the South China Agricultur­al University and University of Glasgow said in a study that was released in February without a formal peer-review. China typically consumes half the world’s pig meat.

Squirrels, porcupines

WHILE the pork shortage bolstered wildlife consumptio­n, eating birds, snakes, bamboo rats, squirrels, porcupines and other non-domesticat­ed

animals was already popular, especially in southern provinces, the researcher­s said.

They cited a 2004 survey by the China Wildlife Conservati­on Associatio­n that found 46 percent of urban residents had consumed wildlife and 2.7 percent were regular consumers. A January 2017 survey found 52 percent of markets they investigat­ed were trading wildlife, while 40 percent of restaurant­s were providing wild animal dishes.

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