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Scientists trace Ebola outbreak to a tree where children play

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WASHINGTON POST  by Rachel Feltman     Dec. 14, 2014 

According to research published Tuesday by the Robert Koch-Institute, fruit bats are almost certainly to blame for the current Ebola outbreak, which has claimed 7,800 lives so far. But while most outbreaks caused by a fruit bat would have someone who hunted or handled the mammal for meat to blame for the contagion, the researchers believe that this case of bat-to-human transmission was sparked by children at play.

A child under observation for signs of Ebola. (Michel du Cille/The Washington Post)

Ebola is a zoonotic disease -- one that's spread between species. The first human cases of Ebola can indeed be traced roughly to the hunting, selling, and eating of bushmeat, or wild mammals like bats and non-human primates...

But the first case of 2014's outbreak has been traced to someone who shouldn't have had much contact with bushmeat. In October, researchers reported that patient zero of the outbreak was likely a 2-year-old boy named Emile Ouamouno who lived in the Guinea village of Meliandou.

In the new study, which was published Tuesday in EMBO Molecular Medicine, researchers sleuthed around Emile's village for clues about how he'd contracted the deadly virus. They checked large local mammals, but none of them showed signs of an Ebola outbreak that could have spilled over into the human population. Bats seem more likely in this case, the researchers claim....

Read full story.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/speaking-of-science/wp/2014/12/30/scientists-trace-ebola-outbreak-to-a-tree-where-children-play/

Read full research report.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2014-12/e-baa122614.php

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submitted by George Hurlburt

Credit: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/Ann Froschauer

scientificamerican.com - by Dina Fine Maron
December 30, 2014

The hollow Cola tree growing in a remote area of southeastern Guinea was once home to thousands of bats routinely hunted and killed by the neighborhood children. It was also a popular spot to play. A year ago, one child in particular lived within fifty meters of the tree: a two-year-old boy who died in December 2013 and later was identified as the first person in west Africa known to have developed Ebola.

CLICK HERE - READ COMPLETE ARTICLE

CLICK HERE - EMBO Molecular Medicine - Investigating the zoonotic origin of the West African Ebola epidemic

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