One Health (Jun 2024)

Hibernating vesper bats are a weak source for biomonitoring of coronaviruses

  • Aleksander Goll,
  • Lara Dutra,
  • Joanna Nowicka,
  • Elena Sgarabotto,
  • Vinaya Venkat,
  • Grzegorz Apoznański,
  • Tomasz Kokurewicz,
  • Alek Rachwald,
  • Lukasz Rabalski,
  • Hussein Alburkat,
  • Jenni Virtanen,
  • Tarja Sironen,
  • Ravi Kant,
  • Vincent Bourret,
  • Maciej Grzybek

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18
p. 100733

Abstract

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Background: Our study explores the role of bats as reservoirs of coronaviruses. Methods: We conducted virological screening of bats hibernating in military bunkers at the Natura 2000 site “Nietoperek” in Western Poland collecting oral and anal swab samples from 138 bats across six species to apply a combination of pan-coronavirus and SARS-CoV-2 specific PCR assays. Results: Only one anal swab tested positive for coronavirus. No SARS-CoV-2 was detected in any of the samples. The low prevalence of coronavirus in the studied colony contrasts with higher rates found in other regions and may be influenced by hibernation. Conclusions: Hibernating bats may show a low prevalence of coronavirus, potentially due to the hibernation process itself. This finding indicates that hibernating bats may not be the most optimal subjects for screening zoonotic pathogens. However, biomonitoring of bats for emerging and reemerging diseases is recommended for comprehensive epidemiological insights.

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