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Coronaviruses are widespread among bats and rats sold for food, study warns

  • Study by Vietnamese researchers highlights how wild animal trade increases risk of humans becoming infected by diseases such as Covid-19
  • Coronaviruses were found in 58 out of 70 sites studied in the south of the country

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Smoked Bats on a market stall in Tomohon, Indonesia. Photo: AFP

Coronaviruses were widespread in some wild animal trade networks, according to a new study that highlights the increased risk of transmitting diseases such as Covid-19 to humans.

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The study was based on an analysis of animals collected in southern Vietnam between 2013 and 2014, in which scientists found various coronavirus strains in bats and rats sold for food.

“Human behaviour is facilitating the spillover of viruses, such as coronavirus, from animals to people,“ the study said.

“The wildlife trade supply chain from the field to restaurant and end consumer provides multiple opportunities for such spillover events to occur.”

The current pandemic is the latest example of how coronaviruses that originate in animals have caused deadly diseases in humans.

The 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome outbreak was probably caused by a coronavirus that originated in bats, while camels were a major host for the virus that caused Middle East respiratory syndrome.

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