
zoonotic diseases are now transmitted from person to person. However, the search for habitat for new species of wild animals can create a constant danger for them.
Two months after the start of the international monkeypox epidemic, more than 18,000 cases had been reported worldwide.
In 2003, the virus spread through exotic pets imported from Ghana, infecting 72 people, including 3-year-old children. 19 people were hospitalized before the outbreak was curbed.
Looking back, the blatant lesson appears to be the rate at which monkeypox has changed its behavior since then.
By 2003, every case could be traced back to human contact with an infected animal. In 2022, transmission seems predominantly person-to-person. This can be traced back to sexual contact or skin-to-skin contact between men who have had sex with another.
However, one important detail from the 2003 eruption is worrying researchers studying this new eruption.
Twenty years ago, the virus spread from African wild animals to American animals sold as pets.
No one has considered such cross-species susceptibility, as no human infection with monkeypox has previously been identified outside of West and Central Africa.
African wild animals at the time, were known to transmit disease to those who hunted or inhabited their territories.

Surprisingly, the virus can spread to wild animals on other continents. It remains a tale of warning and could serve as a warning that the virus could gain a foothold in new animal populations after it has spread to nearly 80 countries.
However, it is highly troubling that virologists are talking about a new range of possible new host species that could pose a “risk of retransmission” from humans to animals, creating new exposure risks beyond what is currently known.
Scientists are studying this closely. “At this point, I don’t think there are clearly any zoonotic cases,” said a virologist and professor at the International Vaccine Center at the University of Saskatchewan, Angela Rasmussen.
“And I do think that that would be distinct, because we would see cases popping up with no connection to an MSM sexual network, and that has not happened yet.”
Several species of rodents have been found to carry monkeypox in the country where they were first identified, so some species are susceptible to monkeypox in other countries. However, the accumulated knowledge is not enough to reveal its meaning.
“What I take from the 2003 experience is that there is a diverse range of species that are likely susceptible to monkeypox, But we do not yet fully understand what that looks like.” says a microbiologist and assistant professor at the University of Manitoba Jason Kindrachuk, who studies monkeypox and other zoonotic pathogens.

History of monkeypox
Monkeypox got its name because monkeys collected from zoos or laboratory animals were its victims when the disease was first identified,
although it circulates among various species of rodents and primates.
It was first detected in monkeys transported from Singapore to the Polio Research Center in Copenhagen in 1958, then transferred to a laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania in 1960 and to the Walter Reed Laboratory of the US Army in 1962.
Two years later, it made many monkeys, orangutans, chimpanzees and gorillas sick. Gibbons and many other species that live in the Rotterdam Zoo. The outbreak was an early warning that monkeypox could spread in a complicated way, as primates have not arrived at infected zoos.
The virus was transmitted to them through new acquisitions: Two giant South African pangolins sold to zoos by wildlife traders. It was later suggested that the pangolins were hiding somewhere along the chain of custody in a nursery with already infected animals, similar to the crossbreeding that led to the 2003 U.S. outbreak.

This may be why laboratory monkeys were also infected during the first outbreak.
According to old medical journals, there was a huge trade in primates around the world in the 1960s, which was an unfortunate side effect of the drive to develop and test the first polio vaccine.
“Conditions for shipping and handling were deplorable all kinds of animals from different places being crowded together,’’ a prominent virologist wrote in the 1990s.
It took years for public health professionals to realize that monkeypox originated in Africa and that the virus could infect humans. Both were almost accidental discoveries.
The 1970s marked the beginning of a powerful international campaign to eradicate smallpox from countries where it occurs.
After the vaccinators passed through the area, the field team discovered a groundbreaking case characterized by smallpox pustules. They identified a cluster case in the village of Derpocratis Benblic, Congo, where people were intended to be fully vaccinated, and found that the lesions were as a matter of fact caused by monkeypox.
A study project to find the origin of the clusters began to research local primates and later discovered that the main harbor for the virus may not be monkeys, but some species of squirrels that live outside villages and often become prey.
Decades later, it is still unclear which rodent or primate is the main host of the monkeypox, and whether the virus has passed through multiple species to defend itself. Captured wild animals have been identified several times.
Experiments have shown that many other species, including rats and guinea pigs, are susceptible to infection. and rabbits. However, these laboratory results cannot determine whether this species will become a vector in the real world.
In addition, the experimental conditions can be very different from natural conditions. Animals may be exposed to more or for longer periods of time than in the wild.
An instance of laboratory conditions that differ from real world scenarios is the 2003 monkeypox outbreak in the United States.
Many exotic pet sellers include African species of Gambian giant rats, tree squirrels, sleepy American prairie dogs, and European porcupines.

This contact never occurs in natural ecosystems, so it may not indicate which species is the most likely host if monkeypox spread across the world, and review by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) found no retrospective explanation for the more than 170 African rodents and 103 prairie dogs involved in the outbreak. They may have been killed or escaped, but a limited sample in the Midwest has shown they are no longer in circulation.
There is strong evidence that SARS COV 2, the virus that causes Covid, has spread from infected people to animals, stoats and white-tailed deer in North America and Europe. It is possible that the monkeypox will follow the same path.
When the outbreak began, the UK Health and Safety Commission recommended that people infected with monkeypox should remove all rodents from their homes while they were recovering to reduce the chance of reinfection.
Because there is little data on the susceptibility of different species to monkeypox, the only way to determine risk is to set up an extensive surveillance program to look for animals with current or past signs of infection. Even if scientists knew about endangered species, it would be a monumental work. “Think about bats and Ebola: We’ve been looking for infections for decades now. You’re looking for a tiny, tiny pin in a massive haystack.” said Kindrachuk .

Unlike humans or mice, they do not have an extensive bank of cells and tissues recovered from many species of wild animals over the decades. If available, they can provide data to compare known carriers of monkeypox with other potentially endangered species.
In order to detect the transfer of a monkeypox to a new animal species, virologists may need to create samples that are identical to waste samples prepared to detect SARS COV 2.
Thus, existing systems (in this case, veterinary field research, animal rehabilitation or zoos) can be used to address questions that can be answered with rapid automated laboratory technologies.
This is less precise but faster than capturing and smearing or drying individual animals. And that would be faster, though less accurate, than grabbing individual animals to smear or bleed. And it will be much faster than the 2003 alternative. It is not knowing which animals are at risk of infection and it is too late to realize that they are sick.