
One World, One Health
Hungry Bats, Flowering Trees, and Dead Horses – A tale of disease spillover
·17 min
Send a text It was 1994, and a new virus was killing racehorses in Australia. Then it killed a horse trainer who was caring for his charges. The virus, called Hendra after the Brisbane suburb where it first surfaced, is a relative of the measles virus. Hendra virus has been traced to large, furry bats known as flying foxes. While it doesn’t make the bats sick, they can spread it to animals such as horses, which can become very ill and die. And there’s an interesting twist. Researchers led b...

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One World, One Health