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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMore than a dozen gorillas at Zoo Atlanta diagnosed with COVID-19
Zoo Atlanta is treating 13 western lowland gorillas who have tested positive for COVID-19. The gorillas were tested after they demonstrated mild coughing, runny noses and loss of appetite. Atlantas animal handlers took fecal samples and nasal and oral swabs from the gorillas and sent the samples to the Athens Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory at the University of Georgia, which returned a presumptive positive result.
Atlantas gorillas are apparently the second group of great apes infected by the coronavirus, according to Dr. Sam Rivera, senior director of animal health at Zoo Atlanta. A troop of eight gorillas at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park were treated for the virus in January. One San Diego silverback received an experimental antibody regimen, and all recovered.
The 20 gorillas at Zoo Atlanta are divided into four troops, and members of every troop have shown evidence of infection. Rivera said it is likely that the virus made its way into the gorilla population from an animal care staffer who was asymptomatic when she came to work, but was tested later and was shown to be positive. That staffer had already been vaccinated and was wearing the protective gear that has long been part of Zoo Atlanta protocol, including gloves, mask and a face shield.
Because the gorillas live together in close proximity, it is impossible to isolate the affected members, said Rivera. All will be tested. As the affected gorillas recover from their symptoms, the staff plans on vaccinating the gorilla population with the Zoetis vaccine, which was developed for veterinary use and had been used at the San Diego zoo on its ape population. Zoo Atlanta has already vaccinated its Bornean and Sumatran orangutans, its Sumatran tigers, its African lions and its clouded leopard.
COVID-19 has been known to infect tigers, lions, mink, snow leopards, cougars, dogs and domestic cats.
https://www.ajc.com/news/coronavirus/more-than-a-dozen-gorillas-at-zoo-atlanta-diagnosed-with-covid-19/K4XFA5FS5RATPJPZ4VKOCGOVJI/
hlthe2b
(102,131 posts)veterinary vaccine available to zoos some time ago and the great apes should have been a target, along with the big cats and other highly vulnerable species.
Why did they wait?
applegrove
(118,492 posts)Last edited Sat Sep 11, 2021, 08:37 PM - Edit history (1)
pandemic forever. Except that animals don't congregate in as large numbers as humans do. So maybe endemic is all we can hope for. Everyone will get it at some point. It will never go away. Still it makes no sense that kids don't mask by fiat in Texas and Florida. Unless you want to keep incubating the virus in the kids to have breakouts kill adults.