HenOnAJuneBug
Crowing
- May 20, 2015
- 2,719
- 5,797
- 392
I would not eat infected or sick birds at all bats not at all
I wouldn't eat a bat either unless I was desperate, but these people sure love them.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I would not eat infected or sick birds at all bats not at all
I don’t want to argue, there’s plenty of wonderful studies on HIV isolation and research, but you could start here.Your doing what scientists do who try to protect an idea: come up with explanations without any evidence for said claims.
Point me to a study that demonstrates HIV isolation.
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/201...epidemic-killed-more-11000-people-west-africaPoint me to evidence.
Different culture. They believe the bat has medicinal properties.I wouldn't eat a bat either unless I was desperate, but these people sure love them.
This source lacks both authority and credibility.That 1987 study is paywalled. I think they probably claimed to have isolated it; this article addresses their flaws.
http://virusmyth.com/aids/hiv/ppisolation.htm
Yup! But all relevant. Zoonotic diseases are important for animals keepers to understand. Not every pathogen is spread the same way.
What if a bat that was hosting the Ebola virus bit a chicken? Would the chicken show symptoms? Could you eat the chicken?
All good questions, but maybe not for this thread.![]()
Kind of.... but very few threads stay on topic?Even though this thread is really starting to get off-topic
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/201...epidemic-killed-more-11000-people-west-africa
Fruit bats are the species native to and eaten in Ivory Coast.
Long-Fingered bats are the species native to and carriers of Ebola in Liberia.
The researchers didn't isolate the virus itself but found about one-fifth of its genome in the animal