Kasargod (Kerala):
The vital organs of five cats, who died days after they were caught from a dedicated ward for Coronavirus patients in Kerala's Kasargod, have been sent to detailed examination to a lab in Thiruvanathapuram.
Officials on Thursday said a preliminary postmortem carried out did not detect any "trace of COVID-19" and experts said "stress" could be the reason behind the death of the cats, which were kept in a crate with little passage of air.
The animal husbandary department officials decided to send their vital organs of the cats -- two male, a female and her two kittens -- to the State Institute of Animal Disease Centre in Thiruvananthapuram for detailed examinations, they said.
"Since the cats were caught from the COVID ward, the postmortem was conducted. No trace of COVID-19 could be detected... we decided to send the internal organs to Thiruvananthapuram," Dr Tito Joseph, who conducted the postmortem, told PTI.
If needed, the organs would be sent to the National Institute of High Security Animal Diseases (NIHSAD) lab in Bhopal for further examination, Mr Joseph, who is the Kasargod district coordinator of animal disease control project, said.
The cats were found in the COVID-19 wards before being caught on March 28.
The female cat died two days after it was put up in the crate kept at the Animal Birth Control Centre in Kasaragod.
Later, two more cats and the kittens died, officials said.
Mr Thomas said the workers engaged by the department had provided food, including milk, to the cats while being kept in the crate.
Experts, including Mr Joseph, said they believe that stress could be the reason for the death of the cats.
"The stray cats were caged immediately. It is certain that they could not adapt to the situation in the crate. So we believe stress could be the reason for their death. But since it happened during COVID-19 scare we cannot take a chance.
That is the reason why a detailed examination of the internal organs of the cats was decided," Mr Joseph said.
The Animal Husbandry Departments epidemiologist M J Sethulakshmi, part of the team of doctors who conducted the postmortem, said "no signs" of COVID-19 could be detected during the procedure.
The death of the cats come at a time when the government has put zoos in the country on alert and asked them to collect samples fortnightly in suspected cases after a tiger at a US zoo tested positive for coronavirus.