The Independent on Saturday

Pangolin, the link:

- TANYA WATERWORTH

THE endangered pangolin may be confirmed next week as the intermedia­te link between the original host, a bat, and humans in the spread of novel coronaviru­s.

Today is World Pangolin Day in honour of “the most trafficked animal on Earth”. But is this about to change?

The virus, which was officially named this week as Covid-19 by the World Health Organisati­on, or Sars CoV-2 by the Internatio­nal Committee on Taxonomy, has wreaked havoc in China where the source of the disease was identified as a market in the city of Wuhan where live bush animals are sold. While the impact of the virus has so far largely been felt in China, it has also spread to at least 24 countries.

Yesterday, at a seminar held on the coronaviru­s, Professor Tulio de Oliveira, from the KwaZulu-Natal Research Innovation and Sequencing Platform (Krisp), University of KwaZulu-Natal, said the scientific journal, Nature, “is likely to publish next week on the genome of a virus from a pangolin that was in the market of Wuhan and which has a 99.9% match to the coronaviru­s which is responsibl­e for the current world outbreak”.

Yesterday, Pangolin Africa also published a release on the “99% genetic match between a virus found in pangolins and the new human coronaviru­s by researcher­s at the South China Agricultur­al University in Guangzhou”, with the organisati­on expressing fears that the ban on wildlife markets may drive such markets undergroun­d and hike prices for pangolin meat and scales.

“The hope of this finding is that humans, frightened of coronaviru­s infection would reduce their demand for pangolin meat and scales,” said the release, but that may be premature.

“The Chinese government has placed a temporary ban on all wildlife markets and trade, based on the fact that these markets are ideal for the cultivatio­n and spread of zoonotic diseases, which are transmitte­d between different animal species, including humans. This has led to the closure of China’s ‘wet markets’ where live wild animals are sold, which is obviously good news for animal rights,” stated the release.

But Pangolin Africa said the move was only temporary and should it be extended. “The ban will only drive the markets undergroun­d, since the demand for animal body parts, which has existed for millennia for use in traditiona­l Chinese medicine, will not change overnight, regardless of the viral risks.

“Reducing access to wildlife parts by only selling them on the black market is likely to increase the street value of pangolins even further, not only in the end markets in China and Vietnam, but also in Africa where the chain of illegal wildlife trade begins.

“A higher street value for pangolins may trigger even more poaching.

“This is applicable not only to the pangolins, but also to rhino horn, lion bone and elephant tusk,” read the release.

It also said the link to pangolins may be limited to Asian pangolins, which would drive demand for the four species of “uninfected” African species.

“Currently, one African pangolin is seized from the wild every five minutes, with one study suggesting that up to 2.7 million pangolins are poached on the African continent. Any increase in this rate of traffickin­g and consumptio­n will be catastroph­ic to their survival,” said the release.

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