BFF-22 Pangolin identified as potential link for coronavirus spread

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ZCZC

BFF-22

CHINA-HEALTH-VIRUS-ENVIRONMENT

Pangolin identified as potential link for coronavirus spread

BEIJING, Feb 7, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – The endangered pangolin may be the link
that facilitated the spread of the novel coronavirus across China, Chinese
scientists said Friday.

At least 31,000 people have been infected and 630 killed by the virus,
which has spread to two dozen countries.

Researchers at the South China Agricultural University have identified the
scaly mammal as a “potential intermediate host,” the university said in a
statement, without providing further details.

The new virus, which emerged at a live animal market in central China’s
Wuhan city late last year, is believed to have originated in bats, but
researchers have suggested there could have been an “intermediate host” in
the transmission to humans.

After testing more than 1,000 samples from wild animals, scientists from
the university found the genome sequences of viruses found on pangolins to be
99 percent identical to those on coronavirus patients, the official Xinhua
news agency reported Friday.

The pangolin is considered the most trafficked animal on the planet and
over one million have been snatched from Asian and African forests in the
past decade, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature
(IUCN).

They are destined for markets in China and Vietnam, where their scales are
used in traditional medicine — despite having no medical benefits — and
their meat is bought on the black market.

China in January ordered a temporary ban on the trade in wild animals
until the epidemic is under control.

The country has long been accused by conservationists of tolerating a
shadowy trade in endangered animals for food or as ingredients in traditional
medicines.

The SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) virus that killed hundreds of
people in China and Hong Kong in 2002-03 also has been traced to wild
animals, with scientists saying it likely originated in bats, later reaching
humans via civets.

BSS/AFP/BZC/1538HRS