Cerri Jacopo, Mori Emiliano, Ancillotto Leonardo, Russo Danilo, Bertolino Sandro
Faculty of Mathematics, Natural Sciences and Information Technologies University of Primorska Glagoljaška 8 6000 Koper Slovenia.
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Istituto di Ricerca sugli Ecosistemi Terrestri Via Madonna del Piano 10 50019 Sesto Fiorentino (Florence) Italy.
Mamm Rev. 2022 Jan;52(1):16-25. doi: 10.1111/mam.12261. Epub 2021 Jun 27.
SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused the COVID-19 pandemic, is genomically similar to a SARS-like beta-coronavirus found in Asian rhinolophid bats. This evolutionary relationship impressed the global media, which then emphasised bats as key actors in the spillover that resulted in the pandemic. In this study, we highlight changes in the traditional and new media coverage of bats and in Internet search volumes that occurred since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.We analysed Google and Wikipedia searches for bats and coronaviruses in 21 countries and eight languages, as well as television broadcasts in the USA, some of which have global coverage, between January 2016 and December 2020. In January 2020, the amount of television news about bats boomed, and news associated with the term 'bat' shifted to COVID-19-related topics. A nearly identical pattern was observed in Google searches during 2020 at the global scale. The daily time series of television coverage and Internet search volumes on bats and coronavirus in the USA covaried in the first quarter of 2020, in line with the existence of a media bubble. Time-series analysis revealed that both the Google Trends index and visits to Wikipedia pages about bats boomed in early 2020, despite the fact that this time of year is usually characterised by low search volumes.Media coverage emphasised, correctly or not, the role of bats in the COVID-19 pandemic and amplified public interest in bats worldwide. The public image of these mammals, in many cases threatened and important ecosystem service providers, was seriously compromised. We therefore recommend that policymakers and journalists prioritise scientifically accurate communication campaigns about bats, which would help counteract the surge in bat persecution, and leverage interest towards positive human-bat interactions.
严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)是引发新冠疫情的病毒,在基因组上与在亚洲菊头蝠中发现的一种类似SARS的β冠状病毒相似。这种进化关系引起了全球媒体的关注,随后媒体强调蝙蝠是导致这场大流行的病毒外溢事件中的关键角色。在本研究中,我们着重介绍了自2020年新冠疫情开始以来,传统媒体和新媒体对蝙蝠的报道变化以及互联网搜索量的变化。我们分析了2016年1月至2020年12月期间21个国家、八种语言的谷歌和维基百科上关于蝙蝠和冠状病毒的搜索情况,以及美国的电视广播(其中一些具有全球覆盖面)。2020年1月,关于蝙蝠的电视新闻数量激增,与“蝙蝠”一词相关的新闻转向了与新冠疫情相关的话题。在2020年全球范围内的谷歌搜索中也观察到了几乎相同的模式。2020年第一季度,美国电视报道的每日时间序列以及关于蝙蝠和冠状病毒的互联网搜索量呈现出共变关系,这与存在媒体泡沫的情况相符。时间序列分析显示,尽管每年的这个时候搜索量通常较低,但2020年初谷歌趋势指数和维基百科上关于蝙蝠页面的访问量都出现了激增。媒体报道无论正确与否,都强调了蝙蝠在新冠疫情中的作用,并放大了全球公众对蝙蝠的兴趣。这些哺乳动物在许多情况下是受到威胁且提供重要生态系统服务的物种,其公众形象因此受到严重损害。因此,我们建议政策制定者和记者优先开展关于蝙蝠的科学准确的宣传活动,这将有助于应对蝙蝠受迫害情况的激增,并利用公众兴趣促进积极的人与蝙蝠互动。