Hyderabad:With Nadia - a four-year-old Malayan tiger - recently being diagnosed positive for COVID-19 at the Bronx Zoo in New York, the focus is now slowly shifting from humans to animals as potential hosts of the deadly virus.
Nadia, along with six other big cats, is thought to have been infected by an asymptomatic zookeeper.
Nadia’s is believed to be the first known case of infection in an animal in the US, but it is not an isolated one.
There have been other instances of pets testing positive for the coronavirus elsewhere in the world.
Human to animal transmission
As per the OIE-World Organisation for Animal Health, now that COVID-19 virus infections are widely distributed in the human population there is a possibility for some animals to become infected through close contact with infected humans.
One such incident was that of a 17-year-old Pomeranian from Hong Kong, who contracted a "low-level" COVID-19 infection from its owner and later died.
In another case, a pet cat in Belgium reportedly got infected by his keeper, who was a COVID-19 positive patient. The cat kept vomiting and had breathing difficulties.
Presently, various studies are being conducted to understand the susceptibility of different animal species to the COVID-19 virus.
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Experts, however, have stressed that there is no evidence that animals infected by humans can spread the disease further.
In its report, OIE-World Organisation for Animal Health said, “Currently, there is no evidence to suggest that animals infected by humans are playing a role in the spread of COVID-19. Human outbreaks are driven by person to person contact.”
Popular pets susceptible to the virus