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段落1

This is Scientific American 60-Second Earth. I'm David Biello. Your minute begins now.

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Humans are not the only primates ravaged by the deadly Ebola virus.

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Chimps and gorillas are also susceptible to the disease.

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The current Ebola epidemic, the biggest in human history, may have started with the butchering of an infected fruit bat.

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But it just as easily could have come from a chimpanzee, found dead in the forest and eaten by people who cannot afford to pass up free meat.

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It would not be the first time.

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Ebola has killed thousands of great apes.

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Some 95 percent of gorillas who become infected, die.

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Several previous outbreaks of Ebola in central Africa stemmed from dead gorillas or chimps found in the forest and butchered for food.

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All it takes to start an epidemic is infected blood getting in a person's eye, mouth or open wound.

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That's why veterinarians from the Wildlife Conservation Society and other conservation organizations may prove to be the front line for defending humans against Ebola.

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Like their physician counterparts, vets are hoping to develop a vaccine, perhaps to be administered orally.

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At the very least, monitoring Ebola outbreaks in apes could provide early warning for potential human outbreaks.

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By saving the apes we may be saving ourselves.

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Your minute is up, for Scientific American 60-Second Earth. I'm David Biello.

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