Animals in zoos and sanctuaries have tested positive, including lions, tigers, pumas, cougars, snow leopards and non-human primates like gorillas.
The novel coronavirus
How Do Animals Catch COVID-19 ?
“Four legs good, two legs bad”, is the famous slogan that a domesticated lot of animal rebels in George Orwell’s Animal Farm adopt as they band together to keep humans away from their surroundings. When it comes to the novel coronavirus
According to the US diseases watchdog, Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), while more data is needed, it has been seen that the novel coronavirus
While the search that is going on to identify the host animal from which the bat coronavirus
However, at least one case of animal to human transmission has made authorities and researchers take notice. Cases of COVID-19
Cases of COVID-19
What Are The Animals That Have Tested Positive?
Cats and dogs and big cats and big mammals like gorillas can all catch COVID-19
Animals in zoos and sanctuaries, too, have tested positive, including lions, tigers, pumas, cougars, snow leopards and non-human primates like gorillas. There have been cases of these animals also showing signs of illness.
CDC adds that laboratory experiments have shown that apart from the animals mentioned, pigs, rabbits, some kinds of deer can pick up the virus. “Cats, ferrets, fruit bats, hamsters, racoon dogs, and white-tailed deer can also spread the infection to other animals of the same species in laboratory settings,” it said.
Researchers have also succeeded in infecting non-human primate models like rhesus macaques, baboons, etc. while laboratory mice, which could beat off the original strains of the virus, have been shown to get infected with new variants. However, non-mammals like chickens and ducks “do not seem to become infected or spread the infection”, studies have found.
Of course, it has to be remembered that there are multiple types of coronavirus
What Should You Do To Protect Your Pets?
Given that it is not unknown for different species, mainly mammals, to get COVID-19
So, the CDC says, “Treat pets as you would other human family members – do not let pets interact with people outside the household. If a person inside the household becomes sick, isolate that person from everyone else, including pets.”
However, serious illness in pets “appears to be extremely rare”, the CDC says, although it notes that infected pets “might get sick or they might not have any symptoms”. Pets that do get sick mostly have a mild illness and experience full recovery, it added.
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