Baudel Helene, De Nys Helene, Mpoudi Ngole Eitel, Peeters Martine, Desclaux Alice
TransVIHMI, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), University of Montpellier, INSERM, Montpellier, France.
Laboratoire de Virologie, CREMER, Institut de Recherches Médicales et d'Etudes des Plantes Médicinales (IMPM), Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Zoonoses Public Health. 2019 May;66(3):288-295. doi: 10.1111/zph.12563. Epub 2019 Jan 24.
The ecology of Ebola virus (EBV) remains largely unknown, but the previous detection of viral RNA and anti-EBV antibodies in African bats suggests that they might play a role in the EBV reservoir. Moreover, African bats also carry other potentially zoonotic agents such as Henipah-like viruses, coronaviruses and lyssaviruses. Today only little information is available on interactions between humans and bats. The objective of our exploratory study was to describe the extent and modes of contacts between humans and bats in southern Cameroon, considered as an area at risk for future EBV outbreaks. The survey was conducted in 11 villages of four distinct rural areas in southern Cameroon. A total of 135 respondents were interviewed using semi-structured questionnaires, between February and May 2017. The study showed that direct contacts between bats and humans are relatively common. Bat bushmeat appeared to be an occasional meat resource; 40% of respondents consume bats with a median annual consumption of three, and 28% of respondents hunt them. About 22% of the respondents reported children catching bats. Indirect contact also appeared to be common; 55% of hunters use caves as shelters and 67% of interviewees eat fruits previously chewed by bats. Bat consumption varied significantly between regions (from 0% to 87%) and between pygmies and bantus in the extreme south-east of Cameroon. The study revealed considerable diversity in practices among interviewees, most of them being subsistence cultivators and relying on self-hunted bushmeat. Geographical diversity of contacts and perceptions regarding bats in Cameroon emphasizes the need to adjust zoonotic pathogen surveillance and education campaigns to the specificities of the communities and their context of interaction with wildlife.
埃博拉病毒(EBV)的生态在很大程度上仍不为人所知,但此前在非洲蝙蝠中检测到病毒RNA和抗EBV抗体表明,它们可能在EBV宿主中发挥作用。此外,非洲蝙蝠还携带其他潜在的人畜共患病原体,如亨尼帕样病毒、冠状病毒和狂犬病毒。如今,关于人类与蝙蝠之间相互作用的信息非常有限。我们的探索性研究目的是描述喀麦隆南部被视为未来EBV爆发风险地区的人类与蝙蝠之间接触的程度和方式。该调查在喀麦隆南部四个不同农村地区的11个村庄进行。2017年2月至5月期间,使用半结构化问卷对总共135名受访者进行了访谈。研究表明,蝙蝠与人类之间的直接接触相对普遍。蝙蝠肉似乎是一种偶尔食用的肉类资源;40%的受访者食用蝙蝠,年食用量中位数为三只,28%的受访者捕杀蝙蝠。约22%的受访者报告儿童捕捉蝙蝠。间接接触似乎也很常见;55%的猎人将洞穴用作庇护所,67%的受访者食用过先前被蝙蝠咬过的水果。蝙蝠的食用情况在不同地区(从0%到87%)以及喀麦隆最东南部的俾格米人和班图人之间存在显著差异。研究揭示了受访者之间行为的相当大差异,他们中的大多数是自给自足的耕作者,依赖自己猎杀的丛林肉。喀麦隆关于蝙蝠的接触和认知的地理多样性强调了根据社区的特殊性及其与野生动物相互作用的背景来调整人畜共患病原体监测和教育活动的必要性。