Omicron variant: New York City spike also infected wild deer population

China Environment has previously reported that COVID-19 was rife among populations of wild white-tailed deer in the United States and that the virus had established ‘reservoirs’ in the wild deer population. See Corona virus rife in common US deer and Coronavirus infections increase among deer in US, new study shows.

Update: Delta variant in imported hampsters sparks out break in Hong Kong

Genomic analysis of viral samples from the hampsters (Syrian hamsters. Mesocricetus auratus), which were imported to Hong Kong from the Netherlands, shows that they carried the Delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 into Hong Kong and sparked a human COVID-19 outbreak after a pet-shop worker tested positive for Delta on 15 January 2022.

See the Nature article How sneezing hamsters sparked a COVID outbreak in Hong Kong.

The scientific journal Nature on 4 February 2022 pointed out that hampsters are only the second species, after European mink, known to have spread SARS-CoV-2 to humans. The Nature article said that “Hamsters are highly susceptible to SARS-CoV-2 and so are a popular model for studying the virus”  but a study led by a virologist at the University of Hong Kong has shown that hamsters can become infected outside the laboratory, and that they can pass the virus on to both other hamsters and humans.

Omicron variant found in wild deer in New York City’s Staten Island

A further US study has found that when New York City’s COVID-19 rates spiked last December due to the emerging Omicron variant, humans weren’t the only mammals affected. 

The highly infectious variant also hit the white-tailed deer population on Staten Island, the most suburban of the city’s five boroughs, according to a study led by scientists of Penn State University.

The Omicron variant was detected in nasal swabs from seven of 68 Staten Island deer tested between December 13 and January 31, according to the study, which was funded by the United States Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

It was already known that deer can catch COVID-19, after earlier variants were found in white-tailed deer in New York and several other states. But the Staten Island study is the first to find evidence of the Omicron variant in deer or any wild animal population, Suresh Kuchipudi, a professor of virology at Penn State who led the research team, said Tuesday.

“This sort of opened up the possibility that, like the previous variants, omicron can and has spilled over into animals,” Kuchipudi said. “So therefore we need to continue to monitor.”

Although Omicron has been found to cause generally milder COVID-19 symptoms in humans than previous versions of the virus, scientists worry that new variants could emerge that make people sicker. 

Kuchipudi said the spillover of omicron from humans to deer sparks fears that new and possibly vaccine-resistant mutations could evolve undetected in non-human hosts. 

White-tailed deer forage through a blanket of snow in Lancaster, New York. /AP

“The major concern is that when we let the virus circulate in any animal host, in addition to humans, the complexity of virus evolution becomes very, very difficult to assess and comprehend,” he said. “So the bigger question is, the unmonitored or unchecked transmission of SARS-CoV-2 in deer and potentially other animals could result in the emergence of completely novel variants that might potentially undermine the protection provided by the current vaccines.”

Kuchipudi also noted that one of the infected deer in the study had COVID-19 antibodies from a previous infection, an indication that deer, like humans, can experience breakthrough cases. 

The Staten Island deer study has not yet been submitted to a peer-reviewed journal but has been published as a pre-print because of the significance of the findings, Kuchipudi said.

While humans travel to Staten Island by ferry or bridge, deer first got there by swimming from New Jersey, according to New York City officials. The animals have long caused problems for the borough’s motorists and gardeners. 

The city has contracted with wildlife management firm White Buffalo to control the deer population by performing vasectomies on the bucks. A spokesperson for the city Parks Department said the most recent estimate for Staten Island’s deer population is 1,616 animals – a 21 percent reduction since 2017.

A white-tailed deer is seen eating leaves in front of a home in Bethesda, Maryland on May 27, 2020, while joggers and cyclists go by on Capital Crescent trail which connects Bethesda, Maryland to Washington DC. – (Photo by Daniel SLIM / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images)

Sources:

Smithsonian Magazine, 11 February 2022.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/discovery-of-omicron-in-new-york-deer-raises-concern-over-possible-new-variants-180979559/

CGTN & AP, 09-Feb-2022.
https://news.cgtn.com/news/2022-02-09/Not-just-humans-Study-finds-NYC-Omicron-spike-hit-deer-too-17viByuXOxO/index.html

BioRxiv, 7 February 2022, ‘Detection of SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant (B.1.1.529) infection of white-tailed deer’. https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.02.04.479189v1

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