4.6 Article

Seasonal shedding of coronavirus by straw-colored fruit bats at urban roosts in Africa

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 17, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0274490

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US Agency for International Development (USAID) Emerging Pandemic Threats PREDICT Project Award [AID-OAA-A-14-00102]

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The research focuses on the straw-colored fruit bat and its role in maintaining plant populations in tropical Africa. The study found that the bats are increasingly adapting to urban roosts, leading to potential human-bat contact and the spillover of coronaviruses. The research recommends reducing contact during the pup weaning period to mitigate exposure risk.
The straw-colored fruit bat (Eidolon helvum) is a pteropodid whose conservation is crucial for maintaining functional connectivity of plant populations in tropical Africa. Land conversion has pushed this species to adapt to roosting in urban centers across its range. These colonies often host millions of individuals, creating intensive human-bat contact interfaces that could facilitate the spillover of coronaviruses shed by these bats. A better understanding of coronavirus dynamics in these roosts is needed to identify peak times of exposure risk in order to propose evidence-based management that supports safe human-bat coexistence, as well as the conservation of this chiropteran. We studied the temporal patterns of coronavirus shedding in E. helvum, by testing thousands of longitudinally-collected fecal samples from two spatially distant urban roosts in Ghana and Tanzania. Shedding of coronaviruses peaked during the second part of pup weaning in both roosts. Assuming that coronavirus shedding is directly related to spillover risk, our results indicate that exposure mitigation should target reducing contact between people and E. helvum roosts during the pup weaning period. This recommendation can be applied across the many highly-populated urban sites occupied by E. helvum across Africa.

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