Scientists warn of seal flu danger
Scientists are warning that seal flu could pose a new threat to human health.
They say the H3N8 strain has the potential to pass to other mammals, including humans.
The strain was discovered after the death of 162 New England harbour seals in the US last year.
Post-mortem examinations of five of the animals showed they were killed by a flu infection.
The strain is closely related to one that has been circulating in North American birds since 2002.
But unlike the bird strain, it has adapted to living in mammals. It has also evolved mutations known to ease transmission and cause more severe symptoms.
Specifically, the virus has the ability to target a protein found in human lungs.
Dr Anne Moscona, from Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City, who led the researchers, said: āThere is a concern that we have a new mammalian-transmissible virus to which humans havenāt been exposed yet. Itās a combination we havenāt seen in disease before.ā
The warning is published in the online journal of the American Society for Microbiology, mBio.
One cause for concern was the fact that few scientists had considered the possibility of a bird flu virus infecting seals, said the researchers. It highlighted the fact that pandemic influenza can appear in unexpected ways.
āFlu could emerge from anywhere and our readiness has to be much better than we previously realised,ā said Dr Moscona. āWe need to be very nimble in our ability to identify and understand the potential risks posed by new viruses emerging from unexpected sources.
āItās important to realise that viruses can emerge through routes that we havenāt considered. We need to be alert to those risks and ready to act on them.ā



