Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Marine mammals susceptible to COVID-19: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2020 06:20 PM
  • Marine mammals susceptible to COVID-19: study

A new study says COVID-19 could be spread to whales and other marine mammal through improperly treated sewage and wastewater.

Researchers at Dalhousie University in Halifax say while there have been no documented cases to date, both dolphins and beluga whales have been infected with related coronaviruses in the past.

In the study, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, scientists describes how they used genomic mapping to determine which marine mammals would be vulnerable to the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

When the team looked at amino acids to which the virus binds, they found striking similarities between those in humans and in several marine mammals, including dolphins, beluga whales, seals and sea otters.

Graham Dellaire, director of research in the university's pathology department, said the team found at least 15 marine mammal species were susceptible to infection because they each carry a protein required for the virus to infect cells.

The study predicts that the majority of whale, dolphin and porpoise species — 18 out of 21 — have the same or higher susceptibility to the virus as humans, while eight out of nine seal species are also predicted to be highly susceptible.

“Many of these species are threatened or critically endangered," Dellaire said in a statement. "In the past, these animals have been infected by related coronaviruses that have caused both mild disease as well as life-threatening liver and lung damage."

Studies have shown the virus is excreted in feces and can survive in water for up to 25 days, raising the possibility that wastewater could spread the disease — as has happened in Spain, Italy and France, where the virus was detected in untreated sewage.

MORE Life ARTICLES

Smoke Alarms Save Lives

Smoke Alarms Save Lives
The risk of dying in reported home structure fires is 54% lower in homes with working smoke alarms than in homes with no alarms or none that worked

Smoke Alarms Save Lives

Groups unite to urge US to extend food aid to schoolchildren

Groups unite to urge US to extend food aid to schoolchildren
A high-profile coalition of educators, activists and philanthropists — including the American Federation of Teachers, the NAACP and the charity World Central Kitchen — is urging Congress to extend and expand emergency provisions that allow school districts nationwide to feed millions of children during the coronavirus pandemic.

Groups unite to urge US to extend food aid to schoolchildren

Women embrace #challengeaccepted, but some ask: To what end?

Women embrace #challengeaccepted, but some ask: To what end?
“Challenge accepted," they wrote — female Instagram users across the United States, flooding the photo-sharing app with black-and-white images.

Women embrace #challengeaccepted, but some ask: To what end?

Plush toys, jewelry, dance lessons - Broadway's side hustles

Plush toys, jewelry, dance lessons  -  Broadway's side hustles
Broadway seamstress Amy Micallef hasn't put her talent on hold while theatres are shut. She's been making plush toys — unusual plush toys.

Plush toys, jewelry, dance lessons - Broadway's side hustles

Can I get a job? Wife tries it all for nursing home reunion

Can I get a job? Wife tries it all for nursing home reunion
One hundred and 14 days. That’s how long Mary Daniel went without seeing her husband after the coronavirus banned visitors from his nursing home, separating the couple for the first time since he was diagnosed with early onset Alzheimer's seven years ago.

Can I get a job? Wife tries it all for nursing home reunion

VIRUS DIARY: Keeping New York alive, one song at a time

VIRUS DIARY: Keeping New York alive, one song at a time
Outside, the soundtrack of sirens wailed, each another death blow to the city that had nurtured my development as a musician for so long. But from inside my life on lockdown, an unexpected reconnection to my catalogue of sounds was handing me hope for New York's future.

VIRUS DIARY: Keeping New York alive, one song at a time