
Bat tests positive for rabies
A bat has tested positive for a strain of rabies, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs has announced.
The Daubenton's bat was found injured in Bushy Park in Surrey, by a member of the public and passed to experienced handlers to be looked after.
The animal was destroyed earlier this month after it started behaving abnormally and tests showed it had European bat lyssavirus 2 (EBLV-2), a strain of bat rabies.
Defra said the risk to human health of the disease was "negligible" as treatment was highly effective, but said anyone who believed they or their pets had come into contact with that particular bat, which was found last August, to contact the authorities.
The EBLV-2 strain has been found in six bats in the UK since 1996, in Sussex, Lancashire, Surrey, Oxfordshire and Shropshire, Defra said.
There is a known low prevalence of EBLV-2 in Daubenton's bats in England, but it does not affect the UK's rabies-free animal health status, the department said.
The virus can only be transmitted by the bite of an infected bat, and the Health Protection Agency advises anyone who is bitten to wash the wound with soap and water and seek medical advice immediately.
Anyone who finds a sick or injured bat should not approach or handle it, but should contact the Bat Conservation Trust.
Bats are a protected species and it is illegal to kill them or damage their roosts.
© Independent Television News Limited 2008. All rights reserved.
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