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szdaily -> Special Report -> 
People start virus back and forth on mink farms
    2020-11-12  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

PEOPLE carried the coronavirus onto mink farms in the Netherlands, starting a viral back-and-forth that ended up with 68 percent of fur farm workers and their close associates infected, researchers reported Tuesday.

They said it’s “imperative” that the fur trade not become a source of further spread of the virus into the human population, and noted the densely packed conditions on such farms are ripe for amplifying the virus in ways that could help it mutate.

A team in the Netherlands ran whole genome analyses of virus samples taken from animals and people on 16 mink farms in the Netherlands — looking at the full genetic sequence of the virus for clues about where it may have come from, how it spread and whether it was mutating.

“We conclude that the virus was initially introduced from humans and has since evolved, most likely reflecting widespread circulation among mink in the beginning of the infection period several weeks prior to detection,” Bas Oude Munnink of Erasmus Medical Center in Rotterdam and colleagues wrote in their report, published in the journal Science.

The virus carries a genetic signature that links it to a strain that rapidly spread across Europe and into the United States early in the pandemic. It hit the farms around that time, in April. “Despite enhanced biosecurity, early warning surveillance and immediate culling of infected farms, transmission occurred between mink farms in three big transmission clusters with unknown modes of transmission. Sixty-eight percent of the tested mink farm residents, employees and/or contacts had evidence of SARS-CoV-2 infection,” they added.

People infected the animals, and the animals infected people, they found. And the virus has not yet spread from the farms into the wider community.

So far, no troubling mutations have turned up, they added. Danish authorities have also seen spread on mink farms and seen mutations that don’t necessarily seem harmful, but whose significance is not yet fully understood.

Coronaviruses originate in animals — probably bats, some scientists believe, but with an intermediate mammal likely serving as an incubator to allow the virus to change enough to help it more easily infect people. Cats, dogs, monkeys, hamsters and rabbits are all vulnerable to infection from coronaviruses and from the new coronavirus.

But efforts to infect pigs and poultry have failed, the researchers note. Poultry and pigs are a source of influenza spread.

(SD-Agencies)

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