Gorillas in US zoo test positive for coronavirus

2021-01-12 16:00:35 GMT2021-01-13 00:00:35(Beijing Time) Sina English

AFP

In this file photo taken on January 13, 2015, a gorilla named Jessica holds its 2-week-old baby in its enclosure at the San Diego Zoo, California.

Several gorillas at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park have tested positive for the coronavirus in what is believed to be the first known cases among such primates in the United States and possibly the world.

The park’s executive director Lisa Peterson said on Monday that eight gorillas that live together at the park are believed to have the virus and several have been coughing.

It appears the infection came from a member of the park’s wildlife care team who also tested positive for the virus but has been asymptomatic and wore a mask at all times around the gorillas.

The park has been closed to the public since December 6 as part of California’s lockdown efforts to curb coronavirus cases.

Veterinarians are closely monitoring the gorillas and they will remain in their habitat at the park, Peterson said.

For now, they are being given vitamins, fluid and food but no specific treatment for the virus.

“Aside from some congestion and coughing, the gorillas are doing well,” Peterson said.

While other wildlife has contracted the coronavirus from minks to tigers, this is the first known instance of transmission to great apes and it is unknown if they will have any serious reaction.

Wildlife experts have expressed concern about the coronavirus infecting gorillas, an endangered species that share 98.4 percent of their DNA with humans and are inherently social animals.

Already endangered

Wildlife experts have expressed concern about the coronavirus infecting gorillas, an endangered species that share 98.4 percent of their DNA with humans and are inherently social animals.

The gorillas infected at the San Diego safari park are western lowland gorillas, whose population has declined by more than 60 percent over the past two decades because of poaching and disease, according to the World Wildlife Fund.

The safari park tested feces of the troop after two apes began coughing on January 6. Positive test results were confirmed by the US Department of Agriculture National Veterinary Services Laboratories in three gorillas.

Zoo officials are talking to experts who have been treating the coronavirus in humans in case the animals develop more severe symptoms. They will remain together since separating them could be harmful to the gorillas that live in tight-knit groups.

“This is wildlife, and they have their own resiliency and can heal differently than we do,” Peterson said.

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