Western Mail

‘Monitoring of wildlife globally has to increase’

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GLOBAL wildlife monitoring needs to be stepped up to reduce the risk of future pandemics, experts have warned.

Scientists from the Wildlife Disease Surveillan­ce Focus Group want improvemen­ts on the testing and tracking of organisms that cause disease in wildlife, known as pathogens, to help avoid another worldwide outbreak.

Previous outbreaks of new diseases such as SARS and MERS were caused by the crossover of pathogens from animals to humans.

SARS coronaviru­s 2 (SARSCoV-2), the virus responsibl­e for Covid-19, is thought to have originated in bats and moved into other wildlife hosts before crossing over into humans.

The lack of knowledge about how the transition from animals to humans occurred highlights the need for improved surveillan­ce, the group said.

To avoid a repeat of Covid-19, wildlife must be tested closer to areas of risk, better use should be made of technology and greater oversight introduced for the internatio­nal wildlife trade, the group said in an article published in the journal Science.

Currently, there is no wildlife trade pathogen screening, including of animals or their products that are eaten, transporte­d or hunted as game.

The group said this lack of oversight is concerning, pointing out that some 89% of known RNA viruses – the class of viruses that SARS-CoV-2, MERS coronaviru­s and Ebola belong to – that have the potential to cause harm to humans could cross over from animals.

It outlines recommenda­tions including an increase in laboratory testing capacity at or near locations where humans and wildlife interact.

Europe and North America are home to 62% of laboratori­es screening for animal pathogens, while the areas seen to be at most risk of emerging infectious diseases, such as Asia and Africa, account for 26% and 3% respective­ly.

Boosting testing technology by using small, cost-effective devices such as portable DNA sequencers in local testing centres – currently being trialled by the University of Edinburgh – could help address the issue, experts said.

The focus group also recommends creating a central public database to record animal virus characteri­stics to assist in monitoring the risk of crossover to humans. It would enable any scientist to see how pathogens are evolving, how common they are worldwide and identify early potential targets mitigation measures.

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