'Patient Zero' in deadly hantavirus cruise ship outbreak was Dutch ornithologist Leo Schilperoord
Source: NY Post
Patient Zero in the cruise ship hantavirus outbreak has been identified as ornithologist Leo Schilperoord, whose passion for birds may have cost him his life.
The 70-year-old man and his wife, Mirjam Schilperoord, 69, were on a five-month trip to South America. They first landed in Argentina on Nov. 27, and traveling through Chile, Uruguay and then back to Argentina in late March, where they went on a fateful birdwatching adventure.
The couple from Haulerwijk, a small village of 3,000 people in the Netherlands were identified in obituaries published in their monthly village magazine. When the Schilperoords returned to Argentina on March 27, they visited a landfill four miles outside the city of Ushuaia.
The spot, overrun with trash, is avoided like the plague by its residents, but serves as a pilgrimage point for birdwatchers from all over the world in search of a rare creature the white-throated caracara, nicknamed Darwins caracara after famed evolutionary biologist Charles Darwin, the first to collect it.
Read more: https://nypost.com/2026/05/09/world-news/hantavirus-patient-zero-was-dutch-ornithologist-leo-schilperoord/
eggplant
(4,229 posts)as it were.
eppur_se_muova
(42,386 posts)BigMin28
(1,873 posts)to the locals is always good advice.
Prairie Gates
(8,444 posts)IronLionZion
(51,525 posts)Might be a good idea to mask up if going birdwatching in such places.
70sEraVet
(5,595 posts)I hope for the best for the rest of the passengers. I understand that the survival rate is rather dismal.
Conjuay
(3,102 posts)The carbon footprint these people leave is ridiculous.
Read Christian Cooper's book if you don't believe me.
littlemissmartypants
(34,239 posts)I guess we could say he died doing what he loved and did it for his entire life as a professional contribution to humanity and the natural world, couldn't we?
We certainly don't have to worry about him expanding his carbon footprint now, do we?