<p>Four lions at Barcelona Zoo, three of them older females, caught Covid-19 last month but suffered only mild symptoms and have since recovered, the Catalan animal park said.</p>.<p>Their keepers were tipped off when they noticed "mild respiratory symptoms" among three 16-year-old females and a four-year-old male, a zoo statement said.</p>.<p>The symptoms emerged as two of their keepers tested positive for the virus.</p>.<p>"The four lions were tested with the viral antigen detection kit... and were found to be positive," it said, indicating the diagnosis was confirmed by PCR tests.</p>.<p>They were immediately treated with anti-inflammatories and closely monitored under a protocol similar to that for the flu, and "responded positively".</p>.<p>"At no time were the lions seen having difficultly breathing or other respiratory issues, and all symptoms disappeared within a fortnight, apart from coughing and sneezing," the zoo said.</p>.<p>To avoid catching the virus, the keepers wore FFP3 masks, plexiglass visors and protective footwear, and they were lowered into the enclosure in a halter.</p>.<p>The zoo also contacted "international experts such as the Bronx Zoo veterinary service in New York, the only one to have documented a case of Sars-CoV-2 infection in big cats," it said.</p>.<p>In early April, a four-year-old female tiger at the Bronx Zoo tested positive for Covid-19, likely contracting it from a keeper who was asymptomatic at the time.</p>.<p>Since the start of the pandemic, cats, dogs and various other animals have tested positive for Covid-19 but until now, minks are the only animals proven to both contract the virus and pass it on to humans.</p>.<p>Several countries have ordered the mass culling of their mink populations, notably Denmark where more than 10 million have already been killed.</p>
<p>Four lions at Barcelona Zoo, three of them older females, caught Covid-19 last month but suffered only mild symptoms and have since recovered, the Catalan animal park said.</p>.<p>Their keepers were tipped off when they noticed "mild respiratory symptoms" among three 16-year-old females and a four-year-old male, a zoo statement said.</p>.<p>The symptoms emerged as two of their keepers tested positive for the virus.</p>.<p>"The four lions were tested with the viral antigen detection kit... and were found to be positive," it said, indicating the diagnosis was confirmed by PCR tests.</p>.<p>They were immediately treated with anti-inflammatories and closely monitored under a protocol similar to that for the flu, and "responded positively".</p>.<p>"At no time were the lions seen having difficultly breathing or other respiratory issues, and all symptoms disappeared within a fortnight, apart from coughing and sneezing," the zoo said.</p>.<p>To avoid catching the virus, the keepers wore FFP3 masks, plexiglass visors and protective footwear, and they were lowered into the enclosure in a halter.</p>.<p>The zoo also contacted "international experts such as the Bronx Zoo veterinary service in New York, the only one to have documented a case of Sars-CoV-2 infection in big cats," it said.</p>.<p>In early April, a four-year-old female tiger at the Bronx Zoo tested positive for Covid-19, likely contracting it from a keeper who was asymptomatic at the time.</p>.<p>Since the start of the pandemic, cats, dogs and various other animals have tested positive for Covid-19 but until now, minks are the only animals proven to both contract the virus and pass it on to humans.</p>.<p>Several countries have ordered the mass culling of their mink populations, notably Denmark where more than 10 million have already been killed.</p>