Hemorrhagic Fever: An Outbreak of the Marburg Virus Has Begun
(noqreport.com)
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https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/marburg-virus-disease
Interesting:
Marburg virus in animals
Rousettus aegyptiacus bats are considered natural hosts for Marburg virus. There is no apparent disease in the fruit bats. As a result, the geographic distribution of Marburg virus may overlap with the range of Rousettus bats.
African green monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) imported from Uganda were the source of infection for humans during the first Marburg outbreak.
Experimental inoculations in pigs with different Ebola viruses have been reported and show that pigs are susceptible to filovirus infection and shed the virus. Therefore, pigs should be considered as a potential amplifier host during MVD outbreaks. Although no other domestic animals have yet been confirmed as having an association with filovirus outbreaks, as a precautionary measure they should be considered as potential amplifier hosts until proven otherwise.
Precautionary measures are needed in pig farms in Africa to avoid pigs becoming infected through contact with fruit bats. Such infection could potentially amplify the virus and cause or contribute to MVD outbreaks.
African green monkeys...lab monkeys, reading between the lines.
Also reading between the lines, they have been poisoning pigs, and the pigs then shed the virus.
Guess I'm off bacon for a while. Maybe a long, long while.
...I haven't eaten the stuff in years...
...you are on the right track....