
Audio By Carbonatix
An outbreak of the Ebola virus has claimed at least 63 lives in Guinea.
To combat the spread of this deadly disease, Guinean officials have taken the unusual step of banning the consumption of bat soup, grilled bat and other local delicacies.
"We discovered the vector [infectious] agent of the Ebola virus is the bat," Remy Lamah, the country's health minister, told Bloomberg News.
"We sent messages everywhere to announce the ban. People must even avoid consumption of rats and monkeys. They are very dangerous animals."
What Is Ebola?
Ebola is a hemorrhagic virus that spreads through bodily fluids and can cause high fever, diarrhea, vomiting and internal and external bleeding. There is no vaccine or cure, and Ebola is fatal up to 90 percent of the time, according to the National Institutes of Health.
Medical experts believe that animals are the natural hosts for the Ebola virus, which has in the past been transmitted to humans via chimpanzees, gorillas and monkeys. Though bats and other mammals can harbor the virus, they may not show any symptoms of the disease.
Bats can be prepared for human consumption a number of ways, according to the BBC. Bats are often grilled over an open flame or boiled in a spicy soup with peppers and other ingredients.
In Guinea, located in West Africa on the Atlantic Ocean, the Toma, Kissi and Guerze ethnic groups eat bats regularly.
Bats host diseases
Though many animals can spread disease, bats have come under increased scientific scrutiny in recent years for their uncanny ability to host "zoonotic" viruses, that is, viruses that readily make the jump from one species to another.
"There seems to be something different about bats in terms of being able to host zoonotic infections," David Hayman, a wildlife epidemiologist at Colorado State University, told LiveScience in a 2013 interview.
The flying mammals are reservoirs for more than 60 viruses that can infect humans, and host more viruses per species than even rodents.
In addition to the Ebola virus, rabies, histoplasmosis, SARS, Nipah (which causes deadly brain fevers), Hendra (a lethal respiratory disease), Marburg, Lyssaviruses and other diseases can be spread by bats, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Latest Stories
-
Sabalenka loses deciding set 6-0 to Pegula in Berlin
14 minutes -
The World Cup records that look set to be broken
23 minutes -
VAR official who made hand gesture returns to duty
34 minutes -
Liverpool reject £21.7m Inter Milan offer for Jones
43 minutes -
Ten-man Belgium held by Iran in second World Cup draw
53 minutes -
Doku criticised over plan to return home for birth
1 hour -
Lamine Yamal shows why this could be his World Cup
1 hour -
Serena Williams to make singles comeback at Wimbledon
1 hour -
Meloni tells Trump to ‘focus on your own popularity’ as row escalates
2 hours -
World Cup still waits for real Brazil to show up
2 hours -
Mahama jokes about Father’s Day gifts, compares bouquet haul to First Lady’s Mother’s Day surprise
2 hours -
NCPTA backs ban on extravagant school graduations, calls for return to discipline, character building
2 hours -
Ghana ranked 1st in Africa with highest policy rate; cost of credit most expensive
2 hours -
Central Regional NADMO gives residents in dilapidated buildings 14 days to evacuate
3 hours -
Bibiani NPP members call for regional chairman’s resignation over disqualification of aspirants
3 hours