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[Man] Yeah, I remember all this.
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[Reporter] Bioethicists Kerry Bowman once visited the now-infamous seafood market in Wuhan, China.
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It was packed full of live and dead animals.
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A leading theory is that a worker inside this market contracted the virus from an animal.
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[Bowman] You've got urine and feces spraying from one enclosure to another
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creating really an incubator for emerging viruses.
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[Reporter] Now, a newly published paper strongly suggests, like SARS
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the original source of this virus was bats.
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Scientists sequenced its genome
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then compared it to other coronaviruses living inside horseshoe bats from eastern China.
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They found a close match.
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Slightly different from SARS but in the same family.
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[Man] Most of it will come back to bats.
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[Reporter] Professor Scott Weese studies and treats infectious diseases in animals.
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He says bats live all over the world.
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They're essential in pollinating fruit and eating insects.
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And they've been passing diseases to one another in their vast colonies for thousands of years.
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But Weese says they also have an important trait in common with us.
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Bats are mammals so they are related to us.
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And if certain components of that bat are somewhat human-like
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it makes that ability to virus across a lot easier.
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[Reporter] Meaning a virus that likes living in a bat may also like living in us.
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The question is why don't the viruses sicken or kill the bats?
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They're the only truly flying mammal and that's got to have some impact on its physiology
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[Reporter] Peter Daszak studied bats in China for 15 years.
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He speculates that as bats evolved to fly somehow their immune systems changed.
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If we could find out you know the chemicals that bats use within the body to regulate viruses
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maybe some of those could be used as potential drugs against some of those viruses.
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[Reporter] Flying also gave bats the ability to easily spread disease.
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Their bites urine and feces can infect people and animals on farms
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and in the wild.
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The market that I saw in Wuhan, we counted 56 different species.
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So a lot of these species and probably almost two-thirds of them were wild.
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[Reporter] Stopping the sale of wildlife in these markets would help
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but people are also encroaching on the areas where bats live.
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Scientists say we need to do a better job studying and monitoring bats.
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More outbreaks like this one are inevitable
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but lessons can be learned from this virus
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with the goal of getting ahead of the next one.
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Christine Birak, CBC News, Toronto