Photo: Denver Zoo/Facebook

Over a dozen big cats at the Denver Zoo have tested positive for the coronavirus.
On Monday, the Colorado facilityannouncedthat 11 African lions — between the ages of one and nine — tested positive for COVID-19 after receiving nasal swab tests.
Zookeepers performed the tests after noticing that the animals were experiencing coughing, sneezing, lethargy, and nasal discharge. The staff noted that the big cats' symptoms are mild, and the lions will be monitored closely.
Denver Zoo/Facebook

Officials stated in a press release that the lions started showing symptoms after the zoo reported that two 11-year-oldAmur tigers tested positivefor COVID. They assure that, as of now, nothing indicates that the cases are linked.
“There have been a number of big cats to come down with COVID-19 at zoos throughout the country, including our two tigers, Yuri and Nikita,” Brian Aucone, Denver Zoo senior vice president for life sciences, said in astatement. “Fortunately, the vast majority have fully recovered, and the upside is that there’s an established knowledge base for us to draw from to help treat our animals. We’ve been in touch with other zoos that have also recently managed COVID cases in their big cats to inform the care we’re providing.”
Zoo officials stated that though none of the lions were vaccinated — or the two tigers that tested positive — veterinarians plan to vaccinate the big cats as soon as animal-specific doses become available to the facility.

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The Denver Zoo was one of the many facilities across the country that beganvaccinating their animalsthis summer, along with the Oakland Zoo in California and the Milwaukee County Zoo in Wisconsin.
Veterinary pharmaceutical company Zoetis donated more than 11,000 doses of its experimental COVID-19 vaccine for animals to about 70 zoos, sanctuaries, conservatories, academic institutions, and governmental operations; the company shared in a Julynews release.

Larsen added, “We’re concerned about the animals' overall populations and long-term survival on the plane. There’s been concern about wild populations of these animals, some of the last on earth, and what may happen when the virus gets into these animals. We’re just trying to do the best we can.”
The Denver Zoo will provide health updates on the big cats' COVID cases as the animals recover.
source: people.com