Via the South China Morning Post: China bans wildlife trade as killer Wuhan coronavirus spreads. Excerpt and then a comment:
China issued a blanket ban on the wildlife trade on Sunday, as the country struggles to contain a deadly virus thought to have jumped from animals to humans.
Health authorities have linked exotic animals sold at a seafood market in the central city of Wuhan to the new coronavirus, which has killed 80 people and infected more than 2,400 others within China, and spread around the world.
The ban goes into effect immediately and will continue until the end of the “national epidemic”.
In addition, wildlife breeding centres will be quarantined, regulations strictly enforced, and the public warned not to eat wild game products, according to the orders backed by three government agencies.
“Consumers should fully understand the health risks of eating wild animals, avoid ‘game meat’, and eat healthily,” the agencies – the State Administration for Market Regulation, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, and National Forestry and Grassland Administration – said in a statement on Sunday.
The move follows a call from 19 leading scientists for the “elimination of the consumption and trade of wild animals”, published on the Twitter-like platform Weibo on Friday.
The group said various emerging infectious diseases had been linked to animals in recent years, including severe acute respiratory syndrome (Sars), H7N9 bird flu, and Middle East respiratory syndrome.
“Controlling or even eliminating wild animal food and its related trade is not only necessary for ecological protection, but also of great significance in controlling risks to public health,” the group said, adding that the risk of disease transmission grew with increased contact between wild animals and humans.
Links between game meat or the handling of wildlife and the Wuhan coronavirus have been suspected since the early days of the outbreak, when many of the initial patients with pneumonia-like symptoms were found to have worked or lived near the city’s Huanan Wholesale Seafood Market.
The market, which reportedly sold exotic game meats in addition to seafood, was closed on January 1.
The link between the virus and wild animals sold at a seafood market was confirmed on Wednesday by Gao Fu, director general of the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention.
The outbreak has similarities with Sars in 2002-03, which was linked to civets sold at a wet market in Guangdong province near Hong Kong.
I can foresee two outcomes from this measure: A drop-off in diseases contracted from wild game, and the rapid growth of an illicit market in wild game. That will ensure that at least some outbreaks continue.