So far there have been 94 confirmed cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome cornonavirus (MERS-CoV), and 46 deaths - with Saudi Arabia as the country most affected.
Researchers gathered 349 blood serum samples from a variety of livestock animals, including dromedary camels, cows, sheep, and goats, from different countries, including Oman, the Netherlands, Spain, and Chile.
They analysed the blood serum samples for the presence of antibodies specific to MERS-CoV, as well as antibodies reactive to SARS coronavirus, and another strain of coronavirus labelled HCoV-OC43, which can also infect humans.
No MERS-CoV antibodies were found in blood serum taken from 160 cattle, sheep, and goats, researchers said.
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However, antibodies specific to MERS-CoV were found in all fifty serum samples taken from dromedary camels in Oman.
The Oman samples originated from a number of different locations in the country, suggesting that MERS-CoV, or a very similar virus, is circulating widely in dromedary camels in the region, researchers said.
Lower levels of MERS-CoV-specific antibodies were also found in 14 per cent (15) of serum samples taken from two herds of dromedaries (105 camels in total) from the Canary Islands, not previously known to be a location where MERS-CoV is circulating.
"The best way to explain this is that there is a MERS-CoV-like virus circulating in dromedary camels, but that the behaviour of this virus in the Middle East is somehow different to that in Spain," researchers said.
"As new human cases of MERS-CoV continue to emerge, without any clues about the sources of infection except for people who caught it from other patients, these new results suggest that dromedary camels may be one reservoir of the virus that is causing MERS-CoV in humans," said researchers.