Ebola Flares in Western Gorilla, Chimp Stronghold

Martin

Deceased
Ebola Flares in Western Gorilla, Chimp Stronghold

James Owen
for National Geographic News

April 4, 2005
The deadly Ebola virus has spread to the world's most important stronghold for western gorillas and chimpanzees, according to a new survey of central Africa.

Researchers behind the surveys say urgent action is needed to protect the threatened primates from becoming infected by the lethal virus.


At meeting in Washington, D.C., last month, conservationists and ape experts learned that Ebola has taken hold in Odzala National Park in the Republic of the Congo.

"Odzala is being hammered," said Peter Walsh, an ecologist at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. "Before the arrival of Ebola, this park held the single largest population of gorillas and chimpanzees in the world."

The warning follows a year-long survey in the region by the Programme for Conservation and Rational Utilization of Forest Ecosystems in Central Africa (ECOFAC), a conservation initiative sponsored by the European Union.

Ape experts said they fear that Ebola could infect all remaining large populations of great apes in western equatorial Africa within the next five years. The region encompasses Cameroon, Congo, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, and the Central African Republic.

"Immediate action is required to determine how best to ensure this doesn't happen," said Diane Doran, a gorilla researcher at Stony Brook University on Long Island, New York.

Conservationists said urgent action may stop the virus from spreading. Steps include:

• patrolling riverbanks to cut downed trees, which apes use as natural bridges, and
• pressing ahead with experimental Ebola vaccines to inoculate wild great ape populations within the next year or two.

Some experts say intervening to stop the spread of Ebola in great apes may also help protect human populations in the region. Most recent outbreaks of the virus in humans have been traced back to the handling of infected ape carcasses.

Ebola River

The Ebola virus is named after the Ebola River, site of the first known outbreak of the disease in 1976. The highly contagious virus causes fever and hemorrhaging that often proves fatal.

The most recent Ebola outbreak in western equatorial Africa flared in the Republic of Congo. First detected in 2002, the virus spread to Lossi Gorilla Sanctuary, some 9 miles (15 kilometers) southwest of the much larger Odzala National Park. Odzala spans 5,250 square miles/13,600 square kilometers.

Walsh, the Max Planke Institute ecologist, noted that it is hard to pinpoint the number of apes the virus has claimed. But he said, "Based on typical rates of mortality in affected areas and the spatial extent of the impact zone, something in the range of 20 to 35 percent of the world's western gorilla population has died from Ebola over the last decade."

"This translates into tens of thousands of animals," he said. "There has also been a heavy impact on common chimpanzees."

The ecologist said he is most disturbed by the fact that Ebola is taking a heavy toll in the remote national parks of western equatorial Africa, the very same parks that are central to great ape conservation plans for the region.

Minkebe National Park in northern Gabon is home to the world's second largest ape population after Odzala National Park. Minkebe is thought to have suffered an ape decline of more than 90 percent in the mid-1990s, due to Ebola.

Reserves like Minkebe and Odzalla are intended to provide great apes sanctuary from the bush meat trade in wild animals, a practice that has seriously impacted great ape and other animal populations throughout central Africa.

By some estimates, bush meat hunters in Africa cull about a billion dollars (U.S.) worth of wild animals from African forests. The animals are sold as meat, often in urban markets far removed from the animals' habitat.

Vaccine Hope

Regarding the current Ebola outbreak, conservationists and ape experts who gathered in Washington, D.C., last month to discuss the crisis proposed a number of measures to prevent the virus from spreading further.

Actions include vaccinating wild great ape populations against Ebola and using natural barriers to prevent infected great apes from mingling with healthy populations.

Studies have suggested that rivers may have stalled the rampant spread of Ebola among ape populations in the past, because gorillas and chimpanzees are reluctant to cross open water. Researchers say work to clear small rivers of overhanging trees in rain forests may block the virus from spreading.

There are also hopes that a vaccine will soon become available for apes. Two Ebola vaccines have been successfully tried in laboratory monkeys. But researchers caution that work remains to develop an effective, real-world vaccine for wild apes.

Field studies will be necessary to determine the best method for administering a vaccine, they say. Options include darting apes with vaccine-filled syringes and using bait laced with an oral vaccine.

"If adequate resources were available, much of the necessary background work could probably be completed in the next year or two," Walsh said. "It would then not be unrealistic for vaccination to commence in three to five years."

"However, if resources are lacking, progress will be incremental, and we may not have a vaccine in time to protect other large ape populations," he said.

Host Species

There are four known stains of Ebola in the world, three of which are found in Africa. The Zaire strain is the one blamed for the current epidemic in central Africa. The viruss main host in the wild has yet to be confirmed, though bats are the leading suspects.

Walsh says knowing the reservoir host (a species that carries and spreads a virus, without succumbing to it) isn't vital. "You just vaccinate apes continuously, as we do to protect domestic dogs from rabies," he added.

The ecologist said other interventions have been considered should the virus spread further. Steps include:

• culling suspected Ebola virus reservoir species,
• implementing artificial birth control in suspected reservoir species, and
• moving healthy apes to virus-free zones.

But for now, the consensus among most scientists is that the best means to prevent Ebola from spreading is to vaccinate great apes and to clear rivers of downed trees so that infected apes cannot cross natural river barriers.

What is certain, scientists say, is that a solution to the Ebola crisis is desperately needed. Otherwise, said Max Planck Institute director Christophe Boesch, the main remaining gorilla populations could be devastated.

"We will be left with a sparse patchwork of apes, many of them living outside of formal protected areas," Boesch warned. "These remnant patches will be too widely scattered to efficiently protect from the ravages of commercial hunting and too small to have good long term viability."


http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/04/0404_050404_ebolagorilla.html
 

Martin

Deceased
Ebola virus: from wildlife to dogs
05 Apr 2005

Ebola virus infection in humans provokes a violent haemorrhagic fever. It usually flares up as intense epidemics. These kill 80 % of the people infected. Seven such outbreaks have hit Gabon and the Republic of Congo since 1994, leading to 445 cases resulting in 361 deaths. Ebola virus thus constitutes a grave public health problem in these countries. No medicine or vaccine is currently available, only prevention and rapid control of epidemics by isolation of disease victims can limit its spreading.

Since 2001, IRD research scientists and their partners (1) have been working to unravel the virus's biological cycle, in other words the whole range of ways in which the virus circulates in its natural environment, from its natural host (or reservoir) right up to humans. They showed that strong epidemics of Ebola have decimated populations of large primates over the past several years in the border regions between Gabon and the Republic of Congo.

Human infection appears to occur only in a secondary way, through contact with carcasses of dead animals (2). However, the virus's natural cycle is not restricted just to transmission from the reservoir to the non-human primate and then to humans. It is quite possible that several reservoir species co-existent and that many other animal species can become infected, thus contributing to propagation of the virus in nature.

A serological investigation conducted from 1980 to 2000 on 790 nonhuman primates from Cameroon, Gabon and the Republic of Congo, belonging to 20 different species, hence revealed that 12.9 % of wild chimpanzees carry Ebola virus antibodies, several of the positive samples dating from before the first epidemics in these countries. These results therefore indicate that chimpanzees are regularly in contact with the animal virus reservoir and that some of them develop non-fatal infections.

The presence of specific antibodies in the animals taken before the epidemics means that the Ebola virus has probably been circulating for a long time in Central African forests. The detection of such antibodies in other primate species (including 5 drills, 1 baboon and 1 mandrill) suggests that circulation of the virus involved many contamination events between distinct animal species.

Thus, the multiplicity of infected species, their different susceptibilities to the virus and the great differences in their ways of life, are indicators of the complexity of Ebola virus's circulation in its natural environment. These observations also show that an epidemic or sporadic cases can appear at any moment in the sub-region of Central Africa as a whole.

Moreover, during the latest epidemics in Gabon and the Republic of Congo, there were many cases where dogs had eaten remains of dead animals infected with the virus, nonetheless without showing visible clinical signs. In order to confirm that these dogs had indeed come into contact with the virus, the scientists looked for the presence of specific Ebola virus antibodies in their blood (3). The percentage of dogs carrying such antibodies increases linearly and significantly the closer they are found to foci of the outbreaks. From 9 % in the two large cities of Gabon, antibody prevalence goes up to 25 % in the untouched villages of the epidemic area, reaching 32 % in the villages where human cases have been attributed to an infected-animal source.

These domestic animals could therefore become infected and excrete virus over a given period, thus becoming a potential source of infection for humans. This could explain certain as yet un-elucidated human infections.

It now appears necessary to assess the role of dogs in Ebola fever outbreaks and take this risk into account in epidemic-control measures. These animals could furthermore be used as indicators of the presence of the virus in the regions where, besides the appearance of cases of both animal and human deaths, there is no external sign as to whether or not Ebola virus is present.

This research work as a whole indicates the progress that has been made over the past years in the understanding the ways in which the virus circulates in its natural environment. Although the reservoir has not yet been identified, investigations are under way to identify the stages which, starting from this reservoir, lead to the emergence of human epidemics. Knowledge of the reservoir animal and of the virus's natural cycle should assist in devising suitable prevention strategies against Ebola epidemics.

(1) This research, conducted since 2001, involves a partnership between the IRD, the CIRMF (Centre International de Recherches Médicales de Franceville, Gabon), the Center for Diseases Control and Prevention of Atlanta (USA) and the Centre Pasteur of Cameroon.

(2) See Scientific news sheet n° 192 - Jabuary 2004, " Virus Ebola : les populations de grands singes menacées ". reference publication: E.M. Leroy, P. Rouquet, P. Formenty, S. Souquière, A. Kilbourne, J.M. Froment, M. Bermejo, S. Smit, W. Karesh, R. Swanepoel, S. R. Zaki, and P.E. Rollin- Multiple Ebola Virus Transmission Events and Rapid Decline of Central African Wildlife, Science, vol. 303 n° 5655, 16 January 2004.

(3) The virus which is rife in Gabon, the Republic of Congo and the Democratic Republic of Congo belongs to the most widespread and most virulent of the four known Ebola sub-groups, the Zaire sub-type, which exists in several strains.

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