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  • Animal sales from Wuhan wet markets immediately prior to the COVID-19 pandemic
    Scientific Reports volume 11, Article number: 11898 (2021) Cite this articleAbstract


    Here we document 47,381 individuals from 38 species, including 31 protected species sold between May 2017 and November 2019 in Wuhan’s markets. We note that no pangolins (or bats) were traded, supporting reformed opinion that pangolins were not likely the spillover host at the source of the current coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. While we caution against the misattribution of COVID-19’s origins, the wild animals on sale in Wuhan suffered poor welfare and hygiene conditions and we detail a range of other zoonotic infections they can potentially vector. Nevertheless, in a precautionary response to COVID-19, China’s Ministries temporarily banned all wildlife trade on 26th Jan 2020 until the COVID-19 pandemic concludes, and permanently banned eating and trading terrestrial wild (non-livestock) animals for food on 24th Feb 2020. These interventions, intended to protect human health, redress previous trading and enforcement inconsistencies, and will have collateral benefits for global biodiversity conservation and animal welfare.


    Introduction


    Alongside extensive research into the epidemiology, virology and medical treatment of SARS-CoV-2, known generally as COVID-19, it is also vital to better understand and mitigate any role that may have been played by the illegal wildlife trade (IWT) in China, in initiating this pandemic1. COVID-19 was first observed when cases of unexplained pneumonia were noted in the city of Wuhan, Hubei Province, in late 20192. Like the SARS-CoV epidemic (another coronavirus, for which there is still no cure) that began in Guangdong Province in 20023, this latest coronavirus most closely resembles types found in bats4. Initial media coverage suggesting that COVID-19 may have spilled-over via pangolins has been refuted5, 6; probably pangolins are simply a natural reservoir of SARS-CoV-27,8,9 along with palm civets (Paguma larvata)10.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) sent an investigative team to Wuhan, from 14 January–10 February 2021, to try to retrospectively ascertain what wildlife was being sold in local wet markets in this region1. Their findings were inconclusive, with markets having been closed down completely at that point for 4 months; however, they did recommend that pangolins should be included in the search for possible natural hosts or intermediate hosts of the novel coronaviruses1.

    Here we present a unique and original dataset recording wild animal sales across Wuhan City’s animal markets between May 2017 and November 2019. We investigate which wildlife species (including both wild-caught and farmed non-domesticated species) were actually being sold for food and as pets, what quantities were involved, and to what extent vendors violated their trading permits. We also list zoonotic pathogens recorded in Chinese wild animal markets and/ or farms since 2009, along with broader notes on infections established for these species. We evaluate these data in the context of China’s renewed commitment to enforce and build on pre-existing laws within a culture of traditional wildlife exploitation. Finally, we make pragmatic policy recommendations for better regulating the animal trade pervasive in China, integrating with ethics, education and enforcement.

    Materials and methods


    Serendipitously, prior to the COVID-19 outbreak, over the period May 2017–Nov 2019, we were conducting unrelated routine monthly surveys of all 17 wet market shops selling live wild animals for food and pets across Wuhan City (surveys were conducted by author X.X.). This was intended to identify the source of the tick-borne (no human-to-human transmission) Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome (SFTS), following an outbreak in Hubei Province in 2009–2010 in which there was an unusually high initial case fatality rate of 30%11. These shops selling live, often wild, animals included two at Baishazhou market (a large market comprising c. 400 other types of shop), seven at Huanan seafood market (c. 120 other shops), four at Dijiao outdoor pet market (c. 100 other shops), and four at Qiyimen live animal market (c. 40 other shops). Other shops sold a variety of goods, such as live and butchered livestock and poultry, dairy produce, fish, shellfish, other food- related products and domesticated pets (Fig. 1 shows the appearance of these markets upon reopening on 8th April 2020).
    Figure 1
    (a) Huanan Seafood market, (b) Qiyimen live animal market, (c) Baishazhou market and (d) Dijiao outdoor pet market (note stray dog) photographed on 10th April 2020.

    Full size image

    As an objective observer unconnected to law enforcement X.X. was granted unique and complete access to trading practices. On each visit, vendors were asked what species they had sold over the preceding month and in what numbers, along with the prices (US$1:RMB¥6.759) and origin of these goods (wild caught or captive bred/ farmed). Additionally, to substantiate interview data, the number of individuals available for sale at the time of each visit was noted, and animals were checked for gunshot wounds (from homemade firearms—gun ownership is strictly regulated in China12) or leg-hold (snap) trap injuries, indicative of wild capture. For 15 species (3 mammals and all 12 reptiles) sold by weight, vendors did not record the number of individuals sold. In these instances, we report numbers of individuals observed to be on sale during monthly visits.

    In China, wild animals are state property protected by the Wild Animal Conservation Law (WACL 1988, revised in 2004, 2009, 2016 and 2018), in concert with the Criminal Law (Article 341)13. Any convicted trader of species, and/or products derived thereof, protected by China’s list of Fauna under Special State Protection (LFSSP) and/or any non-native species listed in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) Appendix I, II could face up to 15 years fix-term imprisonment accompanied by fines and/or the confiscation of property. Additionally, if any animal protected by China’s List of Terrestrial Wild Animals of Significant Ecological, Scientific, or Social Value Protected by the State (LESS) is taken from a wild population and traded for the purpose of food, the offender could face up to 3 years fix-term imprisonment accompanied by criminal detention, surveillance and/or fines. Correspondingly, any utilization of these protected species should be approved by the wild animal conservation and animal quarantine administrations through various regulatory schemes. We therefore also noted if vendors had necessary permits allowing them to sell livestock; specifically a License for Domestication and Breeding of Wild Animals, a License for Trade and Processing of Wild Animals and the quarantine certificate, which must be displayed to customers according to the WACL (2018), Animal Epidemic Prevention Law (2013) and Special Provisions of the State Council on Strengthening the Food Safety Supervision and Administration (2007).

    All protocols in the market surveys were reviewed and approved by the Ethics Committee of Hubei University of Chinese Medicine (No. 20161111). All vendors provided informed written consent to participate in these surveys, and all protocols were performed in accordance with relevant guidelines and regulations.

    Results

    Animal sales from Wuhan’s markets


    Across all 17 shops, vendors reported total sales of 36,295 individuals, belonging to 38 terrestrial wild animal species, averaging 1170.81 individuals per month (Standard deviation (SD) = 445.01, n = 31; Table 1). Including species sold by weight inflated this total to 47,381 individuals. Notably, no pangolin or bat species were among these animals for sale.

    Table 1 List of 38 species sold in Wuhan City markets between May 2017–Nov 2019, including the mean number of live individuals sold per month and price (mean ± SD; n = survey rounds).Full size table

    Almost all animals were sold alive, caged, stacked and in poor condition (Fig. 2). Most stores offered butchering services, done on site, with considerable implications for food hygiene and animal welfare. Approximately 30% of individuals from 6 mammal species inspected (labelled W in Table 1) had suffered wounds from gunshots or traps, implying illegal wild harvesting (Table 1). Thirteen of these 17 stores clearly posted the necessary permits from Wuhan Forestry Bureau allowing them to sell legitimate wild animal species (e.g., Siamese Crocodile (Crocodylus siamensis), Indian Peafowl (Pavo cristatus), Common Pheasant (Phasianus colchicus) and Amur hedgehog (Erinaceus amurensis)) for food; four shops had no such permit. Species names were given in Chinese only, with no clear taxonomic binomial designation. None of the 17 shops posted an origin certificate or quarantine certificate, so all wildlife trade was fundamentally illegal. Notably, vendors freely disclosed a variety of protected species on sale illegally in their shops, therefore they would not benefit from specifically concealing pangolin trade or the trade in any particular species, and so we are confident this list is complete (Table 1).
    Figure 2

    Poor welfare of animals on sale in Huanan seafood market: (a) King rat snake (Elaphe carinata), (b) Chinese bamboo rat (Rhizomys sinensis), (c) Amur hedgehog (Erinaceus amurensis) (the finger points to a tick), (d) Raccoon dog (Nyctereutes procyonoides), (e) Marmot (Marmota himalayana) (beneath the marmots is a cage containing hedgehogs), and (f) Hog badger (Arctonyx albogularis).

    Full size image

    The most expensive wild mammal species sold for food was the marmot (Marmota himalayana) at over US$ 25 per kg, while raccoon dogs (Nyctereutes procyonoides) and badgers (Arctonyx albogularis and Meles leucurus) were priced at c. $ 15–20 per kg; hedgehogs retailed for as little as $ 2–3 each; all wild caught and intended as food. Squirrels (Callosciurus erythraeus and Sciurus vulgaris) were sold as pets for c. $ 25 each. The most expensive wild bird sold for food was the Indian peafowl (Pavo cristatus) at $ 56 each, while captive-bred crested myna birds (Acridotheres cristatellus), prized for imitating human speech, were sold as pets for c. $ 300. The Sharp-nosed pit viper (Deinagkistrodon acutus) was the most expensive reptile, at $ 70 per kg. For comparison, the average retail prices of pork, poultry and fish in Wuhan were $ 5.75, $ 4.25 and $ 2.32, respectively (source: Municipal Bureau of Commerce http://sw.wuhan.gov.cn/html/ztzl/sjfb/scyx/jgjczb/).

    These traded species are capable of hosting a wide range of infectious zoonotic diseases or disease-baring parasites (see Supplementary Table S1 for a non-exhaustive summary of studies reporting diseases in these species in China since 2009).

    Discussion


    Our findings illustrate both the range and extent of wildlife exploitation in Wuhan markets, prior to new trading bans linked to the COVID-19 outbreak, along with the poor conditions under which these animals were kept prior to sale. Circumstantially, the absence of pangolins (and bats, not typically eaten in Central China; media footage generally depicts Indonesia) from our comprehensive survey data corroborates that pangolins are unlikely implicated as spill-over hosts in the COVID-19 outbreak. This is unsurprising because live pangolin trading has largely ceased in China13.

    We should therefore not be complacent, because the original source of COVID-19 does not seem to have been established. This is doubly important because false attribution can lead to extreme and irresponsible animal persecution. For instance, civets were killed en masse following the SARS-CoV outbreak5, and any unwarranted vilification or persecution of pangolins and bats in relation to COVID-19 would risk undermining otherwise very successful efforts to better protect and conserve wildlife in China.

    Regarding our insights into broader IWT issues in Wuhan, the animals sold were relatively expensive, representing luxury food items, not cheap bushmeat (Table 1). We thus make an ethical distinction here between the subsistence consumption of bush meat in poorer nations, versus the sort of cachet attached to wild animal consumption in parts of the developed world, notably China14, but also Japan15. While c. 30% of mammals were clearly wild-caught, indicated by trapping and shooting wounds, the captive breeding of other species is commonplace in China. Raccoon dog fur farming is legal in China; however, due to a drop in fur prices, raccoon dogs are now frequently sold off in live animal markets, augmented by wild-caught individuals. Similarly, all American mink (Neovison vison) originated from fur farms—noting that SARS-CoV-2 has been reported in mink farms in Europe and North America16, 17. In contrast, the captive breeding and sale of Siberian weasels (Mustela sibirica), is totally illegal in China, yet they are easy to breed, and sold openly, without attracting law enforcement. Indeed, prior to COVID-19 reforms, although enforcement officers from the Wuhan Forestry Bureau issued permits to market vendors, they were broadly disinterested in what species were sold. Furthermore, although animals were required to have an origin certificate and be quarantined to ensure they did not exhibit overt disease symptoms, no clear policy was enforced on these conditions. This is important because the species that were traded are capable of hosting a wide range of infectious zoonotic diseases or disease-baring parasites (Supplementary Table S1), aside from COVID-19. These range from potentially lethal viruses, for example, rabies, SFTS, H5N1, to common bacterial infections that, nevertheless, represent a risk to human health (e.g., Streptococcus). Indeed, globally, wildlife is thought to be the source of at least 70% of all emerging diseases18.

    Legislative reform is also vital to clarify unequivocally which species are considered ‘wild’ and cannot be traded legally and safely. Another problem, as encountered by the WHO report is that, retrospectively, it proved difficult to ascertain which species were on sale, even to the genus level, relying solely on the responsible market authority's official sales records and disclosures1. As we19, 20, and others21, have proposed previously, China’s LFSSP and LESS must be updated to apply proper binomials, and to align with recent taxonomic revisions; for instance, cobra snakes (Nada atra) can be farmed legally for food with permits, but wild caught species, such as water snakes and wolf snakes were also sold in Wuhan, labelled simply as ‘snakes’. Such an application of clear species names would allow for more effective prosecutions19. Furthermore, the WHO reports that market authorities claimed all live and frozen animals sold in the Huanan market were acquired from farms officially licensed for breeding and quarantine, and as such no illegal wildlife trade was identified1. In reality, however, because China has no regulatory authority regulating animal trading conducted by small-scale vendors or individuals it is impossible to make this determination1, 21. Similar discrepancies concerning species identification and origins afflict investigations around the world22.

    Another important animal trade that requires attention, outside of exploitation as food, is the supply of pets, like the squirrels and crested myna birds sold in Wuhan’s market. Our previous research found annual trade volumes equivalent to c. 17,000 parrots and c. 160,000 turtles (many turtles being invasive if escaping to the wild) sold online as pets via Taobao.com between 2016–2017, in contravention of China’s WACL and/or the Animal Epidemic Prevention Law23,24,25. While not currently the vector of any major viral epidemics, it would be naive to imagine that unconventional pets do not still also pose a serious concern for public health26. This potential for disease is likely exacerbated by poor sanitary and welfare conditions (Fig. 2).

    Conclusion


    Ultimately, changing the attitudes of consumers is crucial to reduce IWT in China. Efforts to stem the trade in charismatic species, such as elephants/ivory, rhino/horn, tiger bones, etc., have achieved modest success, and have garnered worldwide media attention and public concern27. Nevertheless, despite a general decrease in wildlife poaching and trafficking in China12, attempts to dissuade people from consuming lower-profile, but also higher-volume, species have still fallen-short. Crucially, efforts must be made to change the normative values of consumers through education, raising awareness not only for health, but also for animal welfare and global biodiversity concerns, else continued demand, despite recent national bans, may merely push suppliers into black-market and dark-web operations23. Our own previous investigation found that, in China, a substantial desire to purchase and/or own wildlife products as ‘prestige items’ still transcends social classes, age groups, education levels and rural versus urban residents, even though this involves breaking the law14. In major part this is because protective legislation has not been enforced consistently, fostering a nonchalant disregard for wildlife exploitation23.

    President Xi Jinping has said that: the COVID-19 outbreak is a major test of China's system and capacity for governance, and we must sum up the experience and draw a lesson from it. In an early precautionary response to the COVID-19 crisis, on the 26th of January 2020, the Chinese government (State Administration for Market Regulation, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs and National Forestry and Grassland Administration) temporarily banned the sale of all wild animal and their products in markets, restaurants and over e-commerce, to least until the conclusion of the epidemic. Subsequently, on 24th Feb 2020, the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress implemented a permanent ban on trading terrestrial wild (non-livestock) animals and consuming them as food. The Hubei provincial government announced on 11th April 2020 that the sale of live wild animals and poultry will be strictly prohibited as markets re-open in Wuhan. Ultimately China plans to invest c. $30 million to update Wuhan open-air markets to megamalls and inspire social capital. This is a major and commendable step, redressing previous tacit tolerance for many forms of wildlife trade in China, often already illegal under WACL and/or the CITES, which also carries a huge collateral benefit for global biodiversity and animal welfare28, 29. In response to the pandemic, on April 12th 2021 the WHO (co-signed by UNEP and OIE) released interim guidance for ‘Reducing public health risks associated with the sale of live animals on mammalian species in traditional food markets’30. Adopting these more responsible practices has the potential to save countless lives in the future.

    ...

    Comment


    • Emily
      Emily commented
      Editing a comment
      "We should therefore not be complacent, because the original source of COVID-19 does not seem to have been established. This is doubly important because false attribution can lead to extreme and irresponsible animal persecution."

      So true. Also these false attribitions waste resources and misdirect from useful research leads.

  • How Close Are We To Learning COVID's Origin Story?
    — Experts discuss practical implications of a natural or accidental introduction for the virus
    by Veronica Hackethal, MD, MSc, Enterprise & Investigative Writer, MedPage Today June 7, 2021

    As interest grows in the hypothesis that SARS-CoV-2 may have escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China, more scientists are taking it seriously, in part because of the practical implications associated with it.

    While many experts interviewed for this story were hesitant to speculate on the exact implications of a lab leak, they agreed that further research into the virus' origins is necessary, considering practical implications now may help forestall future pandemics.

    "In the wake of the COVID-19 disaster -- the greatest disaster the world has faced since World War II -- an investigation of the causes of the disaster and policy changes to reduce the risk and impact of similar future disasters are urgently needed," said Richard Ebright, PhD, a molecular biologist and professor of chemistry and chemical biology at Rutgers University in New Jersey...

    Read more: https://www.medpagetoday.com/special...clusives/92969

    Comment



    • JUNE 7, 202110:13 AMUPDATED A DAY AGO

      WHO official says can't force China to give more information on COVID-19 origins

      By Reuters Staff

      GENEVA (Reuters) - A top World Health Organization official said on Monday that the WHO cannot compel China to divulge more data on COVID-19’s origins, while adding it will propose studies needed to take understanding of where the virus emerged to the “next level”.

      Pressed by a reporter on how the WHO will “compel” China into being more open, Mike Ryan, director of the agency’s emergencies programme, said at a press conference that the “WHO doesn’t have the power to compel anyone in this regard”.
      ...

      Comment


      • WHO-China COVID-19 origins team labeled lab leak concerns 'conspiracy theories'

        Jerry Dunleavy
        Wed, June 9, 2021, 3:05 PM·8 min read

        Meeting minutes from discussions between Wuhan lab scientists and the WHO-China COVID-19 origins joint study team reveal lab leak concerns were referred to as “rumors,” “myths,” and “conspiracy theories.”
        ...
        The little-noticed Wuhan lab meeting minutes, which seem to switch between being written from the perspective of the WHO-China team and the Wuhan lab, repeat claims made by lab officials and reveal little pushback or probing questions.

        The WHO-China joint team’s numerous annexes totaled 193 pages, but the annex on its Feb. 3, 2021, visit to the Wuhan lab is just four pages. The various annexes contained five mentions of “conspiracy theories,” all in relation to the Wuhan lab, one mention of “myths,” only in relation to the lab, and three mentions of “rumors," two related to the lab.
        ...
        The annex made no use of the phrase “gain-of-function” and doesn't mention alleged Chinese military collaboration.
        ...
        The annex contained a section on “conspiracy theories" and stated, “The WIV Director raised the issue of conspiracy theories, reiterating that the Institute had worked with the media to stress the need to respect science in the fight against COVID-19 and to rebut the theories. The international team’s visit could help to defuse some of the theories that were circulating.”

        “The Institute did not respond to conspiracy theories but understood why the WHO team needed to ask," the team wrote. "There had been no reports of unusual diseases, none diagnosed, and all staff tested negative for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies.”
        ...
        Peter Ben Embarek, head of the WHO’s international team, discussed the lab visit in February, saying, "Of course, they’re the best one to be able to dismiss any of these claims and provide answers to all the questions that are out there around it.”

        Embarek admitted in late February that “we didn’t do an audit of any of these labs, so we don’t really have hard facts or detailed data on the work done."
        ...


        --------------------------------------------------------------------------

        See also:

        Annex D7 - Wuhan Institute of Virology
        3 February 2021


        Pages 130-133

        Comment


        • Recent coverage of the pandemic’s origins has ensnared readers in semantic quibbles, side points, and distractions.

          Don’t Fall for These Lab-Leak Traps
          Recent coverage of the pandemic’s origins has ensnared readers in semantic quibbles, side points, and distractions.

          By Daniel Engber
          June 10, 2021

          About the author: Daniel Engber is a senior editor at The Atlantic.

          After months of getting very little coverage, the lab-leak theory for the origins of COVID-19—which holds that the virus emerged from a research setting—is now a source of endless chatter. Vanity Fair has a new, 12,000-word investigative feature on the subject, while lab-leak op-eds continue their exponential spread across the pages of The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times.

          A careful look at all the ways that the pandemic might have started matters for the future: It should help us figure out the safest regulations, and the most important goals, for research on emerging pathogens. But the sudden rush of coverage hasn’t always made the lab-leak theory or its implications any easier to grasp. Much has done the opposite, in fact, ensnaring readers in semantic quibbles, side points, and distractions...
          _____________________________________________

          Ask Congress to Investigate COVID Origins and Government Response to Pandemic.

          i love myself. the quietest. simplest. most powerful. revolution ever. ---- nayyirah waheed

          "...there’s an obvious contest that’s happening between different sectors of the colonial ruling class in this country. And they would, if they could, lump us into their beef, their struggle." ---- Omali Yeshitela, African People’s Socialist Party

          (My posts are not intended as advice or professional assessments of any kind.)
          Never forget Excalibur.

          Comment


          • Did covid-19 come from a lab?

            Graham Lawton

            BEFORE heading off to China as leader of a World Health Organization (WHO) fact-finding mission into the origins of SARS-CoV-2, Peter Ben Embarek recorded an explainer video outlining the state of knowledge at the time, January 2021.

            “We know that the first human cases that were detected were detected in Wuhan in December 2019,” he said. “We also know that this virus belongs to a group of viruses that have their original niche in bat populations. In between these two points, we don't know much.”

            Five months on, we actually know less, with the two “knowns” now being called into question. Even though Embarek's investigation concluded that one of the possible origins of SARS-CoV-2 — accidental release from a laboratory — was “extremely unlikely“, that possibility still hasn't been ruled out. If anything, the case for a lab leak has grown stronger.

            On 23 May, The Wall Street Journal claimed that US intelligence has evidence of several employees of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which carries out research on bat coronaviruses, being hospitalised with a respiratory illness similar to covid-19 in November 2019. US President Joe Biden subsequently ordered the US intelligence community to pursue a definitive conclusion on whether the virus spilled naturally from a wildlife reservoir, or from a lab.

            The origin of the virus remains one of the most important unknowns of the pandemic. “We need to know where it came from,” says David Robertson, an evolutionary virologist at the University of Glasgow, UK. “We have to be worried that that could happen again.”

            So what is the evidence for and against a laboratory leak? And what pieces of additional evidence are required for a definitive conclusion on the matter?

            For now, there is a near-consensus that SARS-CoV-2 had a natural origin in a wild animal, says microbiologist Rossana Segreto at the University of Innsbruck in Austria.

            That consensus is the one strongly favoured by Embarek's WHO investigation. At a press conference at the end of the mission in Wuhan on 9 February, he said that the virus seems to have originated in bats.

            However, on 4 March, a group of scientists published an open letter in The New York Times calling for an independent investigation on the grounds that the WHO “did not have the mandate, the independence, or the necessary accesses to carry out a full and unrestricted investigation into all the relevant SARS-CoV-2 origin hypotheses”. Governments of 14 countries subsequently expressed concern that the WHO “lacked access to complete, original data and samples”.

            Last month, Science published a letter from 18 distinguished scientists, which argued that theories of accidental lab release and so-called zoonotic spillover (where an infectious disease jumps from an animal to a human) “both remain viable”.

            One of the signatories is David Relman at Stanford University in California, who argues that the lab-leak hypothesis must be investigated if only to debunk it. “There's still a lot of scientists who are locked into the assumption that this can only have a natural origin,” he says. “I'm not quite sure why.”

            ...


            Comment




            • Peter Daszak: 'Colleagues in China' Sequencing Coronavirus Spike Proteins

              Jun 9, 2021

              Peter Daszak, President of EcoHealth Alliance, describes how his colleagues in China sequence Coronavirus spike proteins in order to anticipate the next Pandemic.

              "We've just got to do it. I just makes sense economically and for humanity's sake"

              Air Date: February 23rd, 2016


              ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              The video above is an excerpt from this conference:

              FEBRUARY 23, 2016
              Pandemics


              Sonia Shah moderated a forum on emerging infectious diseases and the next pandemic. The event began with Ms. Shah discussing her book, Pandemic: Tracking Contagions, From Cholera to Ebola and Beyond.

              Sonia Shah moderated a forum on emerging infectious diseases and the next pandemic. The event began with Ms. Shah discussing her book, [Pandemic: Tracking Contagions, From Cholera to Ebola and Beyond].



              01:16
              Peter Daszak

              ...
              "Some of the viruses will be killers, and some of them won't. How do we work that out from a viral sequence? It is not straightforward. As an example, first of all, we are only looking at viral families that include those that have gotten to people from animals. So we narrow it down straight away. Then when you get a sequence of a virus, and it looks like a relative of a known nasty pathogen, just like we did with SARS. We found other coronaviruses in bats, a whole host of them, some of them looked very similar to SARS. So we sequenced the spike protein, the protein that attaches to cells. Then we… Well I didn’t do this work, but my colleagues in China did the work. You create pseudo particles, you insert the spike proteins from those viruses, see if they bind to human cells. At each step of this, you move closer and closer to this virus could really become pathogenic in people. So you narrow down the field, you reduce the cost, and you end up with a small number of viruses that really do look like killers. And then you look in people, and you say in the people that live in the region where this animal lives, that are exposed to that virus, do we see antibodies specific to that virus?..."

              Comment


              • What the World Wants China to Disclose in Wuhan Lab Leak Probe

                By Kwan Wei Kevin Tan and Jason Gale
                June 11, 2021, 1:27 AM CST
                ...
                Here’s what a new study should examine:

                One big outstanding question is what type of work was actually going on in the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Shi Zhengli, the top bat coronavirus researcher at the lab, said in a March 2020 article in Scientific American that the genetic code of the virus that causes Covid-19 doesn’t match any of her lab’s samples. She also told the WHO team that all staff had tested negative for Covid-19 antibodies.

                Still, researchers haven’t yet had access to all coronavirus isolates and genomic sequence data held at Wuhan labs. And they also haven’t had access to log books and records of the research that was being conducted on coronaviruses, in particular viruses with the RaTG13 bat sequence that is similar to SARS-CoV-2, the pathogen underpinning Covid-19.

                There are also questions about whether the institute conducted gain-of-function experiments, in which researchers manipulate naturally occurring viruses to see if they can be made deadlier or more transmissible.
                ...

                Comment


                • Translation Google

                  UNITED STATES

                  Brinken asked Yang Jiechi to investigate the source of the virus: China still has a way if China does not cooperate

                  June 12, 2021 04:46
                  Lin Fengt

                  WASHINGTON—

                  The United States has formally proposed to Beijing to conduct the second phase of the traceability investigation of the new coronavirus in China. When U.S. Secretary of State Blincoln had a phone call with Yang Jiechi, a member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee in charge of foreign affairs, on June 11, he asked China to strengthen cooperation and transparency on the issue of the traceability of the new crown virus, including the expert-led World Health Organization (WHO) in China. ) The second stage virus traceability investigation. Experts said that even if China does not cooperate, the United States has a way to initiate related investigations.
                  ...
                  Richard Ebright, a molecular biologist at Rutgers University, was one of the first scientists to propose that the new coronavirus may come from a laboratory leak or accident. He and some other internationally renowned scientists signed an open letter to the WHO in March this year, arguing that there were flaws in the WHO-China joint virus traceability investigation and did not solve the hypothesis that the virus came from laboratory escape.

                  In an interview with Voice of America, Ebright said that the scientific community is currently divided on whether the virus came from nature or escaped from the laboratory because the current evidence does not deny the theory of laboratory leakage.

                  He said: "There is no scientific evidence that allows us to choose between the two possibilities of natural spillover origin and laboratory spillover origin. All scientific evidence and all other safety evidences are equally in line with these two possibilities. . There has never been a scientific consensus to the contrary."
                  ...
                  Ebright said that investigating whether the new coronavirus originated in a laboratory is beyond the scope of science, and that the investigation of the virus laboratory's leak theory should be completed by forensic investigation.

                  He said: "The answer to this question will come from traditional investigations, forensic investigations, and there is room for investigation in China. But this kind of investigation will require the cooperation of the Chinese government and the Wuhan Institute of Virology. This form of investigation It will take the form of inspections, checking laboratory facilities, checking laboratory notebooks, checking electronic databases, checking freezer samples, extracting samples from the freezer and performing sequencing, interviewing staff, from ground managers and maintenance personnel to security personnel, to All personnel, including laboratory staff and management personnel, should interview them one by one in private without government supervision. This will require access to the medical records of these personnel and the serological samples of these personnel."

                  But so far, Beijing has been tough. In a call with Secretary of State Brinken, Yang Jiechi, director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission of the CPC Central Committee, accused the leak of the new crown virus from the Wuhan laboratory as a "ridiculous story" fabricated by some people in the United States. He said that China expresses serious concern about this and urges the US not to politicize the traceability issue and to focus on international cooperation in fighting the epidemic.

                  The World Health Organization also recently stated that they cannot force China to provide more information on the source of the new coronavirus. Michael Ryan, the executive director of the organization's emergency project, was asked on June 7 how the WHO forced China to be more open and said, "The WHO has no power to force anyone in this regard."
                  ...
                  But Ebright believes that even without China’s cooperation, the United States is still capable of launching relevant investigations within the United States.

                  He said: "The key point here is that all the work done by the Wuhan Institute of Virology on bat SARS-related coronaviruses is carried out through contract cooperation with an NGO. This NGO is located in New York City and is named ' EcoHealth Alliance' (EcoHealth Alliance), therefore, the'EcoHealth Alliance' will have electronic and paper documents in its hard disk and file cabinets. These documents may provide very important and useful information for solving the origin problem, and they will apply for it. Funding proposals, grant progress reports, raw data from the Wuhan laboratory, analysis data from the Wuhan laboratory, draft scientific papers written with the Wuhan laboratory, and extensive correspondence with the Wuhan laboratory. These are the American public and American policies. The information that the makers need to obtain because we pay for it. We provided $123 million, which was provided by the federal government to the Eco-Health Alliance for this and other projects."
                  ...
                  Peter Daszak, president of the "Ecological Health Alliance", is the only expert from the United States in the expert team sent by the WHO to China to investigate the source of the virus. According to a report from Vanity Fair, the three candidate panel members nominated by the U.S. government—a U.S. FDA veterinarian, a U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) epidemiologist, and U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) None of the virologists were selected.

                  Ebright said that the U.S. Congress or the Department of Justice should promptly initiate an investigation and summon relevant personnel. Matthew Pottinger, who served as the US Deputy National Security Adviser in the Trump Administration, also said earlier that the US Congress should establish a cross-party investigative committee to investigate the theory that the new crown virus originated from laboratory escape.

                  Boming testified at a hearing held by the U.S. Senate Armed Services Committee on June 8: “I think a bipartisan committee with subpoena power should be established quickly. I think we need to stop the (virus) gain-of function. -function) research, and take the lead on a global scale, and restore Obama’s ban on functional gain research. The ban is intended to help predict the current pandemic, but it may actually plant the seeds for this pandemic. "

                  Those who support the theory that the new coronavirus comes from laboratory leakage believe that the functional gain study of viruses can increase the pathogenicity and infectivity of pathogens by cross-mixing different types of viruses. It has a high risk and may cause viruses. leakage.

                  China's rebuttal

                  Chinese state media "Global Times" published a report on the English website on June 9 that Yuan Zhiming, director of the Wuhan National Biosafety Laboratory of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, stated that they kept serum samples for laboratory staff every year and did not receive any For reports of abnormal diseases, all staff tested negative for antibodies to the new coronavirus. Regarding the positive influenza cases from October to November 2019, he said that this was a retrospective study conducted by the institute in cooperation with Wuhan Union Medical College Hospital. A total of 1,001 samples were collected from hospital patients. There were no samples in December 2019. Positive samples were found, and four cases of influenza and new coronavirus mixed infections were found in 700 samples in January 2020. The report said that these four cases of mixed infection were not laboratory staff of the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

                  This seems to be a response to the three researchers from Wuhan Institute of Virology that the Wall Street Journal reported exclusively in May based on an intelligence report from the U.S. Department of State, who went to the hospital for treatment after developing serious illness in November 2019. That report led to the theory that the virus leaked from the laboratory to a certain extent, once again attracted public attention.

                  Ebright told VOA that this statement was inconsistent with and contradicted the information provided by the Chinese government to the WHO traceability investigation expert group, and it was also inconsistent with the information obtained by the Australian and US governments.

                  The spokesperson of the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Wang Wenbin once again called the leak of the new crown virus from a laboratory a "rumor" and said that the United States should open the Ft. Detrick biological base in Maryland for the WHO to carry out. Virus traceability investigation.

                  Ebright said that this is the Chinese government's diversion of attention from the source of the virus. He said: "A key issue to remember here is that genetic evolution analysis, that is, the family tree of virus sequences, shows that the virus came from Wuhan, clearly showing that it came from Hubei Province, between September and November 2009 ( Originated from) Wuhan or nearby, so the time and place of the virus appearing are known. There is no ambiguity. (China) said that the virus appeared in Fort Detrick or near Fort Detrick , There is no possibility, it is zero!"


                  美国已正式向北京提出在中国进行第二阶段的新冠病毒溯源调查。美国国务卿布林肯6月11日与中共主管外事工作的中央政治局委员杨洁篪通电话时,要求中国在新冠病毒溯源的问题上加强合作和透明度,包括在中国进行由专家主导的世界卫生组织(WHO)第二阶段病毒溯源调查。专家表示,即使中国不配合,美国也有办法启动相关调查。

                  Comment


                  • Australian professor says 'lot of different routes' possible for Covid-19 lab leak theory

                    6 MIN AGO • SOURCE: 1 NEWS
                    ...
                    Nikolai Petrovsky, a Professor of Medicine at Adelaide’s Flinders University, told Q+A he believes the theory that the virus was leaked from a laboratory has merit.
                    ...
                    "We've put forward a number of different scenarios by which this could happen," he said.

                    "It ranges from the idea that a researcher who's collecting samples from, say, bat caves may have themselves got infected in the process of the collection and then travelled back to the lab in Wuhan not knowing they were infected.

                    "They could innocently have gone back to the lab and then started the outbreak by infecting someone else in the lab or their family."
                    ...
                    "We also know they weren't just collecting these viruses in the bat caves but also culturing them in the labs and when you do that, you're adapting the virus and that can make the virus much more prone to infecting humans.

                    "And then accidentally you touch a plate, and you touch your mouth - that's all it takes to infect yourself. It wouldn't be the first time."

                    He added the infection didn't have to take place at the lab itself too for the theory to work.

                    "They [could not] dispose of the waste properly from the laboratory appropriately so they don't inactivate the waste, it goes to a rubbish dump, it gets picked up by an animal and they infect a human or a human in the rubbish collection or processing picks it up from the waste.
                    ...

                    Comment


                    • G7 summit: World leaders discuss COVID origins - as WHO keeps Wuhan lab leak theory 'open'
                      ...
                      By Greg Heffer, political reporter, in Cornwall
                      Saturday 12 June 2021 20:39, UK
                      ...
                      At their summit in Cornwall on Saturday, G7 leaders were joined by Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the WHO's director general, during their talks on the COVID crisis and efforts to avoid future pandemics.
                      ...
                      Referring to the millions around the world who have died due to COVID, Dr Tedros said: "This is very tragic and I think the respect these people deserve is knowing what the origin of this virus is, so we can prevent it from happening again."

                      Dr Tedros confirmed the WHO was preparing for the second phase of its investigation into the origins of COVID, which he said would need "transparency" and the "cooperation" of China.

                      "We believe that all hypotheses should be open and we need to proceed with the second phase to really know the origins," he said.
                      ...

                      Comment



                      • https://www.researchgate.net/publica...ing_the_COVID-
                        19_pandemic_Serpentinization-induced_lithospheric_long-wavelength_magnetic_anomalies_in_Proterozoic_bedro cks_in_a_weakened_
                        Figure 4: SARS-CoV-2-like Nucleocapsid antigen in COVID-19-like diseased laboratory rats in the absence of experimental induction. (A)Immunohistochemistry analysis of SARS-CoV-1/2 nucleocapsid (brown) in healthy (column 1) and COVID-19-like diseased rats (n=3, from November 2019, column 3) demonstrate the presence of the SARS-CoV-1/2 Nucleocapsid antigen in the lung epithelial cells and renaltubular epithelial cells in COVID-19-like diseased rats (black arrow). (B) Immunohistochemistry staining of the lung from COVID-19-like diseased rat (from November 2019, column 1-2) with the detection system (secondary antibody and the chromogen detector) in the absence (column 1, Minus Anti-NP) or presence (column 2, Plus Anti-NP) of anti-SARS-CoV-1/2 nucleocapsid primary antibody (brown) demostrates the specificity of the staining procedure. The staining of the lung from a healthy rat (column 3) with anti-SARS-CoV-1/2 nucleocapsid primary antibody and the detection system (secondary antibody and the chromogen detector) confirms the specificity of the staining procedure. (C)Immunohistochemistry analysis of SARS-CoV-1/2 nucleocapsid (brown) in COVID-19-like diseased rats (n=5, from March-July 2020) demonstrate the presence of the SARS-CoV-1/2 Nucleocapsid antigen in the lung epithelial cells and renaltubular epithelial cells in COVID-19-like diseased rats (black arrow). Note: Molecular diagnostics for SARS-CoV-2 antigen was not perform on all animals with the COVID-19-like disease. The specificity of the anti-SARS-CoV-1/2 nucleocapsid primary antibody was validated by Alejandro Best Rocha et al, 2020 in human samples.

                        Bility, Moses. (2020). Can Traditional Chinese Medicine provide insights into controlling the COVID-19 pandemic: Serpentinization-induced lithospheric long-wavelength magnetic anomalies in Proterozoic bedrocks in a weakened geomagnetic field mediate the aberrant transformation of biogenic molecules in COVID-19 via magnetic catalysis. 10.13140/RG.2.2.30887.09128.


                        Did a SARS2-like virus infect a rat colony as far back as 11-2019 at the University of Pittsburgh? Was BSL-3 containment breached and a pathogen got into an unrelated area where these rats were housed?

                        Ten BSL-3 “enhanced” Laboratories Separate bacterial and viral suites BD FACSAria, Bioplex, real-time PCR, and other molecular and immune analysis equipment Four fully equipped ABSL-3 enhanced suites Each suite can accommodate an independent pathogen with a different animal species Can accommodate animal species ranging from small rodents to non-human primates Biocontainment caging available Veterinary support staff available Dedicated necropsy suite Clinical Imaging facility with MicroPET and CT instrumentation Aerobiology facility for aerosol exposure of animal models Mobile transfer car

                        Aerobiology

                        Aerobiology facilitates aerosol exposures of animal models to BSL-3 pathogens. The University of Pittsburgh RBL has a dedicated U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases(USAMRIID)-trained aerobiologist as well as a dedicated staff for conducting aerosol exposures.

                        The aerobiology suite has a class III biosafety cabinet (glove box) and uses a mobile transfer cart system for transportation of animals to and from the aerobiology suite. Aerosol exposures are generated using a Collison 3-jet nebulizer controlled by the AeroMP automated aerosol control system from Biaera Technologies.
                        _____________________________________________

                        Ask Congress to Investigate COVID Origins and Government Response to Pandemic.

                        i love myself. the quietest. simplest. most powerful. revolution ever. ---- nayyirah waheed

                        "...there’s an obvious contest that’s happening between different sectors of the colonial ruling class in this country. And they would, if they could, lump us into their beef, their struggle." ---- Omali Yeshitela, African People’s Socialist Party

                        (My posts are not intended as advice or professional assessments of any kind.)
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                        • Video

                          WORLD EXCLUSIVE: Footage proves bats were kept in Wuhan lab

                          Sharri Markson |13/06/2021|17min

                          The Wuhan Institute of Virology kept live bats in cages, new footage from inside the facility has revealed, disproving denials from World Health Organisation investigators who claimed the suggestion was a “conspiracy”.
                          ...
                          The World Health Organisation report investigating the origin of the pandemic failed to mention that any bats had been kept at the Wuhan Institute of Virology and only its annex referred to animals being housed there.
                          ...
                          A member of the World Health Organisation team investigating the origin of the pandemic in Wuhan, zoologist Peter Daszak said it was a conspiracy to suggest bats were held at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

                          In one tweet dated December, 2020 he said: “No BATS were sent to Wuhan lab for genetic analysis of viruses collected in the field. That’s now how this science works. We collect bat samples, send them to the lab. We RELEASE bats where we catch them!”

                          In another tweet, dated December 11, 2020, he said: “This is a widely circulated conspiracy theory. This piece describes work I’m the lead on and labs I’ve collaborated with for 15 years. They DO NOT have live or dead bats in them. There is no evidence anywhere that this happened. It’s an error I hope will be corrected.”

                          This month, Daszak appeared to retract his earlier denials and admitted the Wuhan Institute of Virology may have housed bats but admitted he had not asked them.
                          ...

                          Comment


                        • Chinese Lab-Leak Investigators Demand Inquiry into Role Science Journals Played During Pandemic

                          By Jamie Dettmer
                          June 14, 2021 08:15 AM

                          Scientists who have been challenging the theory that the coronavirus emerged naturally and couldn’t have leaked from a Chinese lab are calling for an inquiry into the role played during the pandemic by leading Western science and medical journals, including Nature and The Lancet.

                          They say the editors of the influential journals rebuffed dozens of critical articles which raised at least the possibility of the coronavirus being engineered and that it might have subsequently leaked from a lab in Chinese city of Wuhan. 

                          “The managers of these journals may have wanted to appease the Chinese Communist Party, as China is where an increasing proportion of their revenue comes from, and China has made it clear that those journals it supports must agree to adhere to its policy agendas,” Nikolai Petrovsky, a professor of medicine at Australia’s Flinders University, told VOA.

                          “So many papers questioning the origins were quickly rejected by the journal editors at Nature and Lancet, etc. without even being sent for review. This early rejection was therefore presumably largely not on scientific grounds but on political or other grounds determined at a high level within those journals,” he says. 

                          The editors of The Lancet and Nature reject the complaints, saying scientific merit determines the submissions they pick to publish and not politics.

                          Petrovsky is one of dozens of scientists skeptical of the natural-spillover theory who say their efforts to point out inconsistencies in the quickly established standard narrative was met with silence, rejection and hostility by the editors of major Western science journals. 
                          ...

                          Another, Richard Ebright, a professor of chemical biology at Rutgers University in New Jersey, says there should be a “day of reckoning.” In an email exchange with VOA he said: “Untruthful statements and improper actions by scientists and science journalists who established and enforced the false narrative extended far beyond refusing to consider papers challenging the false narrative.” 

                          Ebright and others allege some non-peer-reviewed were rushed into print, if they supported the conventional narrative. Those articles in turn set the tone for general media coverage, they add. “Starting in January 2020 and continuing through early 2021, a small group of scientists, and a larger group of science journalists, established and enforced the false narrative that scientific evidence supported natural spillover and a false narrative that this was the scientific consensus,” says Ebright. 
                          ...

                          Full text:
                          Scientists who have been challenging theory that coronavirus emerged naturally are calling for an inquiry into role played during pandemic by leading Western science and medical journals

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