My latest for @NYTMag--on the under-covered phenom of "spillback," by which human pathogens cross the species barrier into the non-human world--is out!
Scientists have known that mink are vulnerable to coronaviruses since the first SARS outbreak in 2002-3. Yet the factory farming of mink has continued in Europe, the US, China and elsewhere
Mink farming introduces unique risks.
Minks are not sociable herd animals like cows, sheep, chickens & pigs, who have been under human domestication, exchanging microbes back and forth with each other & with us, for thousands of years.
They are solitary, meat-eating predators
Once we infected them with SARS-CoV-2, an est. 7 million mink on 400+ farms in Europe & North America sickened. >700k died, a toll orders of magnitude greater than that borne by any other nonhuman species.
(Not to mention millions of healthy mink who were proactively "culled.")
The mink outbreak brewed at least 3 variants that emerged in humans:
Cluster 5, Marseille-4 & the Michigan mink variant, detected in a taxidermist w/ no known links to mink
No evidence that Omicron came from mink, tho' some think that it may have evolved in an animal host
Despite passive and piecemeal surveillance of wildlife, scientists detected SARS-CoV-2 in 2 free-living species as well: wild mink & white-tailed deer.
These creatures could establish a new wildlife reservoir--or spread it to others who will
Here's an illustration from the 16th-century accounts of the Spanish priest Bartolomé de Las Casas, depicting conquistadors feeding native children to dogs
In 1735, morbillivirus broke out in dogs in Ecuador and Peru.
It's now a major pathogen of dogs, causing the disease known as distemper.
And that connects back to mink farms!
To control distemper in mink, mid-20th century farmers used a vaccine consisting of ground-up spleens from distemper-infected mink.
That concoction included a vaccine-resistant pathogen known as amdoparvovirus-1
which has since spread through the mink trade to farms around the world
it's also been found in 41 percent of wild adult mink & nearly 4 percent of martens in British Columbia, & in more than a quarter of striped skunks in California
it can infect humans too.
These pathogens regularly leak out. Biosecurity measures at mink farms, I found, was less than ideal
Some mink farms I visited in UT didn't even have complete perimeter fencing
& the mink sheds have no doors bc of their strong odor (they're related to skunks, so)
Some are located in the middle of neighborhoods; I spoke to neighbors who complained about the stench and about escaped mink terrorizing their pets and backyard chickens
I saw feral cats slinking in and out of open farm gates. Flocks of gulls circling overhead. A family of turkeys on one farm lot. I saw deer on one mink farm property, and nearby roadway signs warning of deer crossings at others.
But at least one farmer I spoke to had no plans to use it.
(I asked if I could take his pic, and he posed by holding this shrieking mink up toward his face)
In most states, there are no regulations on mink farms.
& yet US public health officials did no active surveillance--they relied on mink farmers to self-report outbreaks.
"It's not that different," said @bahanbug "from these captive wildlife farms that we hear about in Asia"
True--but I didn't have the police called on me when I reported on wet markets in China. I did in Utah.
The fur industry even issued a "security alert," warning its members not to let me onto their property, replete w/a pic of my car & license plates
That's me, the "reporter"
After the mink outbreaks in Europe, a dozen countries banned or phased out fur farming. Austria & Netherlands aim to end fur farming in the EU.
But here, efforts to ban mink farming failed in Oregon, & a bill to ban mink farming introduced in July languishes in Congress.
Why?
The mink industry is just a faint shadow of the fur trade that spawned it centuries ago. Today it mostly sells pelts as luxury jackets & fur-trimmed sweaters to consumers in Asia.
But it still leverages the hefty political influence of the American livestock industry.
We need to rethink Covid-19, not just as a human pandemic, but as a multispecies event.
Bc we are animals among animals. By engineering strange & intimate encounters betw infected creatures we endanger our fellow species & implicate our own bodies too.
No-one knows how many mice & rats are experimented on in the US, bc even tho' they are the most common species used in biomedicine, thanks to Sen. Jesse Helms, rodents are officially excluded from the Animal Welfare Act.
Experiments on animals are required by law and bioethics codes, but in a 2014 analysis of 2,000+ drugs, animal tests were found to be “highly inconsistent” predictors of toxic effects in humans.
Last night on "All Things Considered," a guy from FAIR, an anti-migrant hate group founded by a white supremacist, said that the people subject to the #PublicChargeRule "weren't objectively assessed on their self-reliance but rather their bloodline."
His language reminded me of early 20th-century eugenicists.
He went on: "So a lot of these people coming in without a - an economic reason, an employment opportunity, they're a recipe for financial disaster. They're going to cost us absolute billions of dollars."
According to FAIR and the Trump administration, immigrants who come here because of family connections are dead weight, a burden. It's therefore correct to deprive them of resources available to everyone else.
In this story, NPR did not dispute this characterization.