I came across two interesting articles today, about COVID-19.
The first, COVID Virus Declining in Northeast Animals relates to the second, White-tailed deer milk exhibits SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies and synergistic mechanisms that contribute to rapid viral RNA degradation.
The first reports on the findings after surveilling ~900 animals across 27 species… that there was no SARS-Cov-2 in any sample.
That’s striking: the virus wasn’t detected in any wild or domestic species. The researchers hypothesized that as the virus specialized for human hosts, it lost its affinity for other species. Laboratory experiments supported this, showing that while mice could be infected with earlier strains, the Omicron variant resulted in significantly lower viral shedding and zero transmission between individuals. This evolution reduces the likelihood of “spillback,” where the virus might jump from animals back to humans as a new variant.
The second study, a preprint, investigates why white-tailed deer are effectively neutralizing the virus. Researchers discovered robust SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies in both the blood and milk of wild deer. Remarkably, deer milk was found to possess intrinsic antiviral properties absent in human milk, containing significantly higher concentrations of minerals like sodium and magnesium, alongside enhanced protease activity that rapidly degrades viral RNA. These biochemical defenses appear to block mother-to-fawn transmission, explaining why local outbreaks in deer populations are fading out rather than becoming endemic.
I found the researcher’s framing of SARS-COV-2 as specializing for human hosts a bit misdirected, if we consider how the virus has actually mutated.
The mutations we see in dominant human strains (specifically the shift from early variants to the Omicron lineage and its 2026 descendants like “Stratus”) are not simply “host-specialization” in a vacuum. Instead, the virus is optimizing for immune evasion and increased aerosol stability. It is shedding the broad “generalist” traits that allowed it to infect a wide variety of mammalian respiratory tissues and is instead refining its spike protein to bypass the specific hybrid immunity (vaccine + prior infection) prevalent in human populations. It is becoming less of a “jack-of-all-trades” and more of a precision tool for penetrating human social density.
These specific mutations find their ideal home in environments defined by high-volume, indoor stasis: poorly ventilated warehouses, open-plan offices, service industry hubs, and mass transit. When a virus evolves for maximum aerosol persistence and rapid-fire reinfection, it is effectively evolving for the just-in-time logistics of modern commerce. In these spaces, the air is treated as a shared, unmanaged resource, and the constant churn of people provides a continuous burn of hosts that prevents the virus from ever hitting the “fade-out” threshold seen in the deer populations.
In contrast, the “fade-out” in wild animal populations occurs because their environments do not provide this infrastructure of persistence. Deer and mice don’t congregate in high-density, unventilated boxes for ten hours a day. Their social structures and the intrinsic biochemical barriers in their milk act as a firebreak. Similarly, Indigenous life-ways and practices rooted in food autonomy, which emphasize lower density, seasonal mobility, and high-quality, ventilated outdoor activity, offer fewer nooks for the virus to hide. These systems prioritize the health of the collective over the velocity of capital, removing the conditions the virus needs to survive.
Ultimately, what researchers call “human specialization” is actually a specialization for the working conditions of settler-colonialism. Workers in these cultures are often denied the agency to modify their environments. HEPA filters and sick leave would remove the two levers the virus has specialized toward exploiting. While the deer are “locking their doors” via biological evolution, the working class in settler societies is being forced to keep their doors open. The virus isn’t just specializing in Homo sapiens; it’s specializing in the specific vulnerability of people who have been reduced to “human resources” within a system that views viral persistence as a novel administrative tool.