. 2020 Dec 31;56(2):65-66.
doi: 10.12834/VetIt.2375.13627.1.
Epub 2020 Sep 9.
Could Mustelids spur COVID-19 into a panzootic?
Affiliations
- PMID: 32909703
- DOI: 10.12834/VetIt.2375.13627.1
Abstract
The
ongoing pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2 has spilled over into humans from
an animal reservoir. Notably, the virus is now spilling back into a
variety of animal species. It appears striking that American (Neovison
vison) and European (Mustela vison) minks are the first intensively
farmed animal to experience outbreaks. Neither of these have occurred in
Asia or Africa but rather in Europe - namely Spain, Denmark,
Netherlands and in the US, at a mink farm in Utah. Current evidence
indicates that the virus was transmitted to the animals through infected
human workers on the farm.At the time of writing, SARS-CoV-2 infection
has not been documented in any other intensively farmed species,
suggesting that mustelids may exhibit a higher susceptibility to the
virus. Studies have shown that domestic ferrets have an extremely low
resistance to COVID-19 infection (Shi et al. 2020). Mustelids comprise
approximately 60 different species (Kollas et al. 2015) and are widely
distributed across a number of habitats, both aquatic (marine and
freshwater), and terrestrial (prairies, steppes, tundra, forests).
Several wild mustelids (villit NÄÄTÄELÄIMET) have become acclimated to urban areas - such as
raccoons, otters (SAUKOT,Lutra lutra ) and badgers (MÄYRÄT, Meles meles ) , and some are raised in households as pets -
such as ferrets (FRETIT, HILLEREISTÄ jalostetut) . The latter are perhaps at greater risk of infection
than their cousins inhabiting the wild, but it is the former that we
should be most worried about. If infection by SARS-CoV-2 spills into
wild mustelids, these have the potential to become a permanent reservoir
of infection for other animal species. Such a scenario has been seen
before with rabies in raccoons (PESUKARHUT) and skunks (HAISUNÄÄDÄT, Musteloidea, Mephitidae) (Rupprecht et al. 1995) and
with bovine tuberculosis in badgers (Gallagher and Clifton-Hadley
2000).We believe that it is important to prioritize studies in mustelids
on their putative role as reservoirs and amplifiers of SARS-CoV-2
infection in animals and subsequently humans. The development of
appropriate surveillance and intervention strategies will determine if
mustelids are one of the key links in the chain to the initiation of an
unprecedented epochal event: a panzootic.
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