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Due to the discovery of a new mutant corona virus that can be transmitted to humans on the mink farm, the Nordic country Denmark decided to culminate up to 17 million minks.
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen announced the news at a press conference on Wednesday (November 4). He said this decision was based on the “risk” of the mutated virus for the effectiveness of future new vaccines against coronary pneumonia.
Denmark is the largest mink producer in the world. Police said the mass slaughter should be carried out as soon as possible.
For several months, outbreaks of COVID-19 have been reported in mink farms in the Jutland region of North Denmark and other parts of Europe.
Currently, the epidemic in Denmark is still spreading rapidly. Local media reported that the mutated virus strain has infected 5 farm minks and 12 humans.
Prime Minister Frederickson called the current situation “very, very serious.”
He cited a government report that the mutant strain was found to weaken the body’s ability to form antibodies, which may invalidate the new coronavirus vaccine currently being developed.
“We have a huge responsibility to our own people, but with the mutations now discovered, we also have a greater responsibility to the rest of the world,” he told a news conference.
More than 1,000 mink farms will be culled. Danish Police Chief Thorkild Fogde said this would be a “very big project”.
According to the “New York Times” report, since Denmark has yet to announce the details of the mutant strain, researchers outside of Denmark know little about the specific situation.
Stanley Perlman, a microbiologist at the University of Iowa, said he couldn’t evaluate the Danish stocks without more information.
Emma Hodcroft, a geneticist at the University of Basel in Switzerland, asked people to be cautious on social media.
“Don’t panic,” he wrote on Twitter. “As we get more information, scientists will update (on progress).”
In September this year, several Dutch scientists said in a pre-printed article that has not yet been peer-reviewed that the virus is hopping between mink and humans. In Denmark, the government declared that the virus can be transmitted from mink to humans.
Mink and the new coronavirus
The scientific name for mink is American mink, which belongs to the Mustelidae family like the ferret, and due to the high value of the fur used as clothing, it is often bred artificially.
But after the outbreak of the new corona epidemic, the mink was found to be vulnerable to the new corona virus. Because they are mostly kept in crowded environments, they are ideal places to spread the virus and can also get sick and die.
In July, Spain euthanized 100,000 minks after several workers were found to be infected with the common new corona virus on a farm in Aragon.
Several farms in the Netherlands also culled tens of thousands of minks after the outbreak of the new crown epidemic in the summer. At one of the affected farms in the south of the Netherlands, authorities sent people to poison the mink with carbon monoxide and then transport the carcass. According to the authorities, the affected farmers may receive compensation.
According to the National Broadcasting Corporation (NBC) report, in September and October of this year, nearly 10,000 mink were killed by the new crown among the nine mink farms in Utah, USA.
The local vet said that after infection, the mink showed symptoms of mouth breathing, discharge from the eyes and nose, and usually died the next day.
Researchers are currently investigating how and why mink can become infected and spread the new coronavirus.