Denmark plans to cull its mink population after coronavirus mutation spreads to humans

Authored by reuters.com and submitted by hl3official

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Denmark will cull its mink population of up to 17 million after a mutation of the coronavirus found in the animals spread to humans, the prime minister said on Wednesday.

Health authorities found virus strains in humans and in mink which showed decreased sensitivity against antibodies, potentially lowering the efficacy of future vaccines, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said.

“We have a great responsibility towards our own population, but with the mutation that has now been found, we have an even greater responsibility for the rest of the world as well,” Frederiksen told a news conference.

The findings, which have been shared with the World Health Organization and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, were based on laboratory tests by the State Serum Institute, the Danish authority dealing with infectious diseases.

The head of the WHO’s emergencies programme, Mike Ryan, called on Friday for full-scale scientific investigations of the complex issue of humans - outside China - infecting mink which in turn transmitted the virus back to humans.

“We have been informed by Denmark of a number of persons infected with coronavirus from mink, with some genetic changes in the virus,” WHO said in a statement emailed to Reuters in Geneva. “The Danish authorities are investigating the epidemiological and virological significance of these findings.”

Authorities in Denmark said five cases of the new virus strain had been recorded on mink farms and 12 cases in humans, and that there were between 15 million and 17 million mink in the country.

Outbreaks at mink farms have persisted in the Nordic country, the world’s largest producer of mink furs, despite repeated efforts to cull infected animals since June.

Denmark’s police, army and home guard will be deployed to speed up the culling process, Frederiksen said.

Christian Sonne, professor of Veterinary and Wildlife Medicine at Aarhus University, said in an email he believed culling the herd now as a precautionary measure was a sound decision and could prevent a future outbreak that would be more difficult to control. Sonne co-authored a letter published in the journal Science last week calling for the cull.

“China, Denmark, and Poland should support and extend the immediate and complete ban of mink production,” Sonne and his co-authors wrote last week.

Tougher lockdown restrictions and intensified tracing efforts will be implemented to contain the virus in some areas of Northern Denmark, home to a large number of mink farms, authorities said.

“The worst case scenario is a new pandemic, starting all over again out of Denmark,” said Kare Molbak, director at the State Serum Institute.

Minks have also been culled in the Netherlands and Spain after infections were discovered.

bananafor on November 4th, 2020 at 15:35 UTC »

We had heard it was extremely contagious to mink. This is not good news. Mink farms in other countries might have to follow suit.

Galamush on November 4th, 2020 at 15:29 UTC »

Can confirm the reason behind is due to the strain showing resistance to antibodies in the spike protein.

Edit: Above statement is a brief translation from the pressconference on danish television. I am not a professional just a messenger.

Edit. They clarified it wasn't a fully resistance but a partial. How much was not revealed. However the culling is preventional So it wont evolve further making it fully resistant.

Edit 3: This is my source: It is in Danish and he speaks about the mutation from the 16:00 marker. It is Kåre Mølbak the CEO of the National Serum Institute of Denmark.

https://www.dr.dk/drtv/se/tv-avisen-ekstra_-myndighederne-holder-coronapressemoede_221286

Edit 4: Damn my comment blew up :O. Thanks for the silver kind stranger :D.

hl3official on November 4th, 2020 at 15:20 UTC »

Edit to the title, its not 1% of GDP, but 0.7% - 1% of exports Edit to the title, its 15-17 million minks, not 13 million.

The article originally listed 13 and 1%, but got updated.

More:

A newly discovered covid-19 strain which could be more deadly than the current strain has been discovered in 12 people in northern Jutland, scientists believe the mutation stems from mink farms.

More more:

ECDC, WHO and the EU-commission have been informed of the newly discovered Covid strain. Initial research points to antibodies and treatment being significantly less effective against the new strain.

More more more:

Danish government warns that if the new strain is spread, it will have irreversible global impacts and could delay vaccine development.

Source (in danish): https://www.dr.dk/nyheder/indland/live-foelg-pressemoede-om-coronasmitte-blandt-mink-her Another source (English, only posting this one because they have pictures):

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8914515/Denmark-cull-minks-17-MILLION.html