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Strain of SARS Is Found in 3 Animal Species in Asia
The New York Times ^ | May 24, 2003 | KEITH BRADSHER with LAWRENCE K. ALTMAN

Posted on 05/24/2003 2:15:51 AM PDT by sarcasm

HONG KONG, May 23 — A virus virtually identical to the one thought to cause SARS in humans has been found in a tree-dwelling animal whose meat is a delicacy in southern China and in two other species, scientists here and at the World Health Organization said today.

The evidence reported today solves one scientific mystery because it is the first to show that the SARS virus exists outside humans, raising the possibility that it jumped from animals to humans.

The new findings could greatly increase the difficulty of containing SARS in humans because if certain species of wild animals harbor the virus it will be virtually impossible to eradicate the disease.

In linking the animals to SARS, scientists in W.H.O.'s laboratory network tested 25 specimens from eight species of exotic animals offered for sale in a market in Guangdong Province, where the first cases of the human disease are thought to have occurred.

The SARS virus was found in six masked palm civets — a cat-size animal that is served as food — and in the only raccoon dog tested. Evidence of the infection was also found in the blood of one badger.

The civet is the Himalayan, or masked, palm civet. It is related to the mongoose, resembles a large weasel and is a threatened species.

The Chinese government plans to start banning the sale of the animals, said Dick Thompson, a spokesman for W.H.O. But a Chinese scientist expressed doubt that the ban would succeed because the civet, in particular, has traditionally been considered a delicacy.

Liu Zhenhua, a prominent Guangdong chef, said in a telephone interview tonight that civets were eaten mainly in the autumn and winter because of the belief that they help people withstand cold weather.

Since the World Health Organization, a United Nations agency, first recognized the SARS epidemic in March, scientists have suspected that animals might be involved in the human epidemic. The reason is that a number of the earliest cases involved food handlers in markets in Guangdong Province who sold live exotic animals for human consumption.

Health officials have said that the first cases of the disease appeared to have occurred last November among people involved in the culinary preparation of rare animals in Foshan, 90 miles up the Pearl River from Hong Kong.

But whether the species were captured in the wild or raised on farms is not known, W.H.O. said. Nor, the agency said, is it known whether humans transmitted the virus to animals or vice versa.

"While it is more likely that these animals harbor the virus naturally, it is premature to say that the virus is found in nature" because the scientists have yet to determine the origin of the animals, said Dr. Klaus Stöhr, the head of the W.H.O. scientific team investigating SARS.

But if the virus is confined to species that are raised in farms, then bans on such farming might eliminate a source of the virus and could reduce the risk of spreading the virus from animals to humans in the future.

Dr. Stöhr said in an interview that the agency "believes that it is still possible to contain SARS if the person-to-person transmission of the virus is stopped" in affected areas. Dispersal of droplets of the SARS virus in coughs and sneezes is thought to be the primary means of spreading SARS, or severe acute respiratory syndrome.

Dr. Stöhr said that he received an unpublished report of the findings today from scientists at the University of Hong Kong and the Center for Disease Control and Prevention in Shenzhen, just across the Hong Kong border in mainland China. The findings open up many new avenues of research, he said.

One avenue is the need to determine the importance of seemingly minor differences in the genetic maps of the SARS viruses isolated from the animals in the market in Guangdong Province and those found in humans there and elsewhere.

The human SARS virus contains more than 29,000 nucleotides — units of the genetic map — 29 fewer than those found in the SARS viruses isolated from the animals. Though the number may seem trivial, even smaller differences in molecular maps can have major effects on viruses. One example is the influenza virus. The possibility exists that the SARS virus mutated if it jumped species, from animals to humans, Dr. Stöhr said. But, he also said, "what this means for SARS is unclear."

Other fundamental questions that scientists need to answer include:

¶Whether the findings were limited to one market or are representative of most other markets in the area.

¶How widespread the virus may be in wild or farmed animals.

¶How many species of animals are involved, and which ones.

¶Whether wild or farmed animals harbor the virus without becoming sick; the tested, infected civets appeared healthy.

¶Whether infected animals can produce enough virus to infect humans.

¶Whether the virus is in the feed supply and, if so, how it got there. One possibility is from human feces in fertilizer.

¶Whether the animals transmitted the SARS virus to each other in their cages, which are often stacked on top of one another in the filthy, crowded markets in Guangdong.

Another puzzle is why SARS seems to have started "more or less simultaneously in six cities" in Guangdong, Dr. Stöhr said. Infection through a wholesale distributor of animals or of their feed is a possibility.

Answers to some questions might come from taking the SARS virus isolated from the animals and giving it to primates in experiments like those conducted with the SARS virus isolated from humans.

The new findings emerged from a challenge the Chinese government made to scientists to find the source of the SARS virus. The scientists in Hong Kong and Shenzhen conducted a pilot study in which they bought live animals in different areas of a local market. The scientists were not able to determine the number of wholesalers that supplied the animals to the market. The scientists also could not determine the source of the feed for the animals.

After the scientists took the animals to their laboratories, they tested their sputum and feces. They found the SARS virus in the feces of all six civets and in the sputum, or mucus from the mouth, of four of the six, Dr. Stöhr said.

Masked palm civets have short fur that can be brown, orange, red or gray, with black bands on the head and feet. They eat mostly fruit, weigh up to 13 pounds and have bodies that grow up to two and a half feet long, with tails of nearly equal length.

Civets are grown on farms in Guangdong Province and are sometimes trapped in the wild for Chinese kitchens. The animals are becoming increasingly rare across their range, from Pakistan to Indonesia, because of deforestation, and their sale is banned in Hong Kong, where they are a protected species.

A ban on eating them is unlikely to succeed because the consumption of wild animals is so much a part of Chinese culture, said Professor Yuen Kwok-yung, a microbiologist at Hong Kong University.

"It is very difficult to stop a culture," Professor Yuen said. "It has been there for 5,000 years."

It is unlikely that diners can contract the disease from well-cooked animals of any type, Professor Yuen and W.H.O. officials said. The rearing, slaughter and preparation of infected animals are activities more likely to transmit viruses across species, he added.

The scientists also found the virus in the only raccoon dog, a dog resembling a raccoon, that was obtained. Antibodies in the blood from a Chinese ferret badger showed evidence that it had been infected with the SARS virus. But the tests were not intended to determine when the badger was infected.

The scientists also conducted laboratory experiments aimed at supporting the link between the animal and human SARS viruses. They did so by adding serum from the implicated animals that contained protective antibodies to test tubes containing the human SARS virus. The antibody-rich serum inhibited the growth of the human virus.

The scientists also performed the reverse experiment, adding antibodies from human sera that inhibited the growth of the animal SARS virus in test tubes. The findings strongly supported the link, Dr. Stöhr said.

The scientists found no evidence of the SARS virus in three hog badgers; three beavers; two Chinese muntjac; four domestic cats; and four Chinese hare, according to Dr. Stöhr.

Professor Yuen said that although no tests had been done, it was "theoretically possible" that household cats could become infected because they are similar biologically to civets. If so, it could make disease control more difficult.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: china; civets; sars
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1 posted on 05/24/2003 2:15:51 AM PDT by sarcasm
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To: sarcasm
human feces in fertilizer

In many places in China, human feces is fertilizer.

And as for the claim that it will be impossible to change a culture--if that culture is the source of epidemics the rest of the world will cry loudly for change---but in the end, the continual flow of epidemics caused by the culture will simply kill the culture.

2 posted on 05/24/2003 2:24:43 AM PDT by twntaipan (By denying Taiwan observer status WHO doctors have betrayed their Hypocratic oath.)
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To: sarcasm
2 definitions for civet cat

From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1993) :

Civet \Civ"et\, n. [F. civette (cf. It. zibetto) civet, civet cat, fr. LGr. ?, fr. Ar. zub?d, zab?d, civet.]


1. A substance, of the consistence of butter or honey, taken
from glands in the anal pouch of the civet ({Viverra
civetta). It is of clear yellowish or brownish color, of
a strong, musky odor, offensive when undiluted, but
agreeable when a small portion is mixed with another
substance. It is used as a perfume.

2. (Zo["o]l) The animal that produces civet ({Viverra
civetta); -- called also civet cat. It is carnivorous,
from two to three feet long, and of a brownish gray color,
with transverse black bands and spots on the body and
tail. It is a native of northern Africa and of Asia. The
name is also applied to other species.
From WordNet (r) 1.7


As for me, I'll take straight...(hmmm...never mind)...I never liked clear yellowish "anything" on _ANY_thing.



3 posted on 05/24/2003 2:30:38 AM PDT by Psalm118
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To: sarcasm; All
CAUTION: The source of this article has been known to fabricate and misrepresent information represented in their publication as factual. The reader should not rely on this item as being fair or accurate.
4 posted on 05/24/2003 3:13:58 AM PDT by Ed_in_NJ
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To: twntaipan
epidemics caused by the culture will simply kill the culture.

ironic huh?

5 posted on 05/24/2003 4:14:30 AM PDT by Revelation 911 (behold the power of gumbo)
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To: Ed_in_NJ
Heh, heh, heh...I actually scrolled back to the top to see if this was a Debka story

NY Slimes may be less accurate/factual than Debka is!

6 posted on 05/24/2003 4:18:42 AM PDT by twntaipan (By denying Taiwan observer status WHO doctors have betrayed their Hypocratic oath.)
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To: sarcasm
Masked palm civets
7 posted on 05/24/2003 4:29:26 AM PDT by Zipporah
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To: Psalm118
Civet cat, a Chinese delicacy, the cause of Sars?

< SNIP >

Civet is one of the main ingredients in the exotic wildlife dish "dragon-tiger-phoenix soup", for which wealthy Chinese in Guangdong province will pay large sums.

The soup is flavoured with chrysanthemum petals and includes shreds of civet cat and snake.

The current website of Guangzhou's tourist information centre invites visitors to sample this "special dish".

8 posted on 05/24/2003 5:01:29 AM PDT by sarcasm (Tancredo 2004)
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To: sarcasm
Everyone was expecting the reservoir to be in ducks, the source of all the other flu outbreaks.
9 posted on 05/24/2003 5:19:24 AM PDT by secret garden (Go Spurs Go! On to the finals!)
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To: sarcasm
I wonder if the civets are fed pork. There is speculation that if SARS is a man made virus, its testing would have been on laboratory pigs. The spread of the disease could have started when a lab worker took a seemingly healthy, but SARS infected, lab pig home for Sunday dinner.
10 posted on 05/24/2003 6:41:08 AM PDT by randita
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To: sarcasm
bump
11 posted on 05/24/2003 7:57:59 AM PDT by twntaipan (By denying Taiwan observer status WHO doctors have betrayed their Hypocratic oath.)
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To: Ed_in_NJ
LOL!!!
12 posted on 05/24/2003 7:58:52 AM PDT by riri
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To: randita; Judith Anne; Mother Abigail; CathyRyan; per loin; Dog Gone; Petronski; InShanghai; ...
This story may be being put out because the Chinese want to deflect attention from the true cause, e.g., if the disease escaped from a lab.

In any case, I take it the three kinds of animals in question are not that closely related. Masked palm civets belong to Viverridae. Ferret badgers belong to Mustelidae. I don't know what family raccoon dogs belong to. How could the disease be endemic to three different unrelated kinds of animals?

As the article admits, it's entirely possible these animals caught the virus from infected humans.

13 posted on 05/24/2003 8:06:13 AM PDT by aristeides
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To: aristeides; riri; Judith Anne; blam; Dog Gone; Allan; CathyRyan
My opinion is that Civet Cat = CYA

Remember the dead animals at Jahlalabad?

Outside the Bin Laden camp?

See up above that the poor little kitty lives in Pakistan?

Hmmmmmmm............
14 posted on 05/24/2003 8:30:41 AM PDT by Betty Jo
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To: Ed_in_NJ
CAUTION: The source of this article has been known to fabricate and misrepresent information represented in their publication as factual. The reader should not rely on this item as being fair or accurate.

Especially the bit about "The scientists also found the virus in the only raccoon dog, a dog resembling a raccoon, that was obtained." which might lead you to think it is closely related to Fido.

Raccoon Dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides), member of the dog family (Canidae) native to eastern Asia and introduced into Europe. Some authorities place it in the raccoon family, Procyonidae. It resembles the raccoon in having dark facial markings that contrast with its yellowish brown coat, but it does not have a ringed tail. It has short, brown or blackish limbs, a heavy body, and rounded…

15 posted on 05/24/2003 8:42:28 AM PDT by Lessismore
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To: aristeides; Judith Anne
Anyone that has SARS or a relapse of SARS should have their pets checked.

If dogs or cats can even have a transitorial case long enough to reinfect their owners they can be a danger or even pass it to wildlife here.

Many people have pet ferrets and if the mustelids;badgers,ferrets,mink,skunks,etc. become a reservoir here I see no way to keep SARS from being a future constant threat.

Maybe SARS is hitting too close to home for me on too many levels but it seems that all my worst fears are joining into a nightmare scenario.

16 posted on 05/24/2003 1:55:12 PM PDT by Free Trapper
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To: Free Trapper
My wife called last night from her dispatching duties at the local police department. She had just taken a call about a mother skunk with 10 babies in tow. We had an explosion in the skunk population last spring. Many smelly nights. The critters were marching all over the place. They dug into my yard and sprayed my 4 dogs. Our standard procedure is to trap them in a "havahart" trap and release them after curing their bad habits with a .40 S&W. Standard department issue. A .22 would do the job just fine.
17 posted on 05/24/2003 3:45:16 PM PDT by Myrddin
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To: Free Trapper; All
Did civet cats pass virus to humans? Or did humans pass it to them? It's all conjecture right now, says WHO; one possibility is that civet cats caught Sars from the rats and mice they fed on .
18 posted on 05/24/2003 5:10:46 PM PDT by aristeides
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To: Myrddin
All of the furbearers seem to have become overpopulated since the animal rights bunches caused fur to be non PC,causing prices to fall and trapping to slow.

Within the last 8? years I've run into a very apparently rabbid dog and my wife found a possum near home that was foaming at the mouth and walking in tight circles,both typical for rabbies.

Many animals I run into just aren't as healthy as the same types were several years back.

The PCBS ideas of catching critters and relocating them is a likely way to quickly spread disease from one area to another.

I have personal knowledge of at least one federal refuge where (for good reason) many furbearers are live trapped but destroyed and trashed rather than relocating them (this is not broadcast because the animal rights idiots would have a fit).

I hate to see any critter go to waste but I really believe it's better than chancing spreading disease into healthy populations.

19 posted on 05/24/2003 11:45:39 PM PDT by Free Trapper
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To: Myrddin
FWIW.I carry one of the North American Arms 22 revolvers when live trapping because they're so small and light.At these times its most likely for me to need to shoot something that's got ahold of me and doesn't want to let go.

It's real close shooting so the short barrel is no problem and the 22LR mouse gun will even put down a butcher steer when you're right on top of him.Of course any 22 would be fine but you'll carry the NAA all day and never notice any weight.

With all the diseases overpopulated critters or those that hang out around people can have,I want a cartridge that can't blow too much blood,saliva,etc. all over.Just one little scratch on you from the livetrap wire could easily become infected.

If in a populated area with possibly needing to kill something that's loose,I could see good reason for a LEO or anyone else to keep a 22 rifle handy.

I know of one LEO that used a .357 to try to kill a stray kitten that he couldn't get out from under a car (in town).He missed the kitten and was about lynched by the people for his dumb stunt.No telling where the bullet went after it ricocheted off the road at such a low angle.Some folk just don't have any common sense.:o(

20 posted on 05/25/2003 2:18:05 AM PDT by Free Trapper
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