Health concerns sparked after vampire bats start sucking human blood

It sounds like the stuff of horror fiction, but scientists have raised health fears after a species of disease-carrying vampire bat, previously thought to mostly diet on birds, has been discovered feeding on human blood.
Pic courtesy of ShutterstockPic courtesy of Shutterstock
Pic courtesy of Shutterstock

The flying mammals are well known to feed on blood, however, the hairy-legged vampire bat and white-winged vampire bat subspecies predominantly feast on birds.

Scientists in Brazil have discovered that hairy-legged vampire bats have resorted to feeding on humans, sparking fears that the rabies and hantavirus-carrying creatures could cause an increase in disease in humans.

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Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome, is a disease carried by rodents which does not affect the host animal. It can be fatal in humans, and has a mortality rate of 38 per cent, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Enrico Bernard from the Federal University of Pernambuco in Recife, Brazil, was “quite surprised” to find traces of human blood in the faeces of a colony of bats living in Catimbau National Park in the north-east of the country.

He believes that the creatures have been sneaking through holes in roofs and feasting on campers and people sleeping outside - perhaps driven by deforestation of their natural hunting grounds.

The team in Brazil are currently investigating how often and at what time people near the park are being bitten, in order to assess the danger.

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