Cambodia bat researchers on mission to track origin of COVID-19
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[September 20, 2021]
By Cindy Liu and Prak Chan Thul
STUNG TRENG, Cambodia (Reuters) -
Researchers are collecting samples from bats in northern Cambodia in a
bid to understand the coronavirus pandemic, returning to a region where
a very similar virus was found in the animals a decade ago.
Two samples from horseshoe bats were collected in 2010 in Stung Treng
province near Laos and kept in freezers at the Institut Pasteur du
Cambodge (IPC) in Phnom Penh.
Tests done on them last year revealed a close relative to the
coronavirus that has killed more than 4.6 million people worldwide.
An eight-member IPC research team has been collecting samples from bats
and logging their species, sex, age and other details for a week.
Similar research https://reut.rs/3EsZXVO is going on in the Philippines.
"We hope that the result from this study can help the world to have a
better understanding about COVID-19," field coordinator Thavry Hoem told
Reuters, as she held a net to catch bats.
Host species such as bats typically display no symptoms of pathogens,
but these can be devastating if transmitted https://tmsnrt.rs/3lvfsE9 to
humans or other animals.
Dr. Veasna Duong, Head of Virology at the IPC, said his institute had
made four such trips in the past two years, hoping for clues about the
origin and evolution of the bat-borne virus.
"We want to find out whether the virus is still there and ... to know
how the virus has evolved," he told Reuters.
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A researcher from the Institut Pasteur du Cambodge takes an oral
swab from a bat that was captured at Chhngauk Hill, Thala Borivat
District, Steung Treng Province, Cambodia, August 30, 2021.
REUTERS/Cindy Liu
Deadly viruses originating from bats include Ebola
and other coronaviruses such as Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS)
and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS).
But Veasna Duong said humans were responsible for the devastation
caused by COVID-19, due to interference and destruction of natural
habitats.
"If we try to be near wildlife, the chances of getting the virus
carried by wildlife are more than normal. The chances of the virus
transforming to infect humans are also more," he said.
The French-funded project also aims to look at how the wildlife
trade could be playing a part, said Julia Guillebaud, a research
engineer at the IPC's virology unit.
"(The project) aims to provide new knowledge on wild meat trade
chains in Cambodia, document the diversity of betacoronaviruses
circulating through these chains, and develop a flexible and
integrated early-detection system of viral spill-over events,"
Gillebaud said.
(Reportin by Cindy Liu in Stung Treng and Prak Chan Thul in Phnom
Penh; Editing by Martin Petty and Andrew Heavens)
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