You’re focusing on exactly the right “missing middle layer” that news reports tend to skip: what’s actually known mechanistically versus what’s just headline-level risk framing.
Let’s separate the key points carefully.
First, hantaviruses are very well characterized at the genetic level. Multiple species have been isolated and fully sequenced for decades now. They are negative-sense RNA viruses, and their genomes (segmented: S, M, L segments) are mapped for the major human-pathogenic strains. So in the sense you’re asking—is it isolated, sequenced, and genetically understood?—the answer is yes, broadly speaking. We know a great deal about their phylogeny and which strains cluster with which rodent hosts.
What we don’t have is a clean, single “mutation → human transmissibility” story, because it’s not like influenza or SARS-CoV-2 where small changes in a circulating human-adapted virus are being tracked in real time. Most hantaviruses are strongly adapted to specific rodent reservoirs, and human infection is usually a spillover event rather than a sustained human chain.
That brings us to the human-to-human issue, which is where reporting often becomes misleading.
Almost all hantaviruses do not transmit human-to-human. The main exceptions that matter are:
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Andes virus (South America): this is the only hantavirus with well-documented person-to-person transmission in multiple clusters. Even there, transmission is inefficient and usually requires close contact.
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A few other suspected cases exist, but none show sustained epidemic spread like airborne respiratory viruses.
So when you see “human-to-human spread” in headlines, it is usually referring specifically to Andes virus, not hantavirus as a group.
Now on mortality—your “~50%” figure is also context-dependent:
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In Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS) (Americas), mortality is often quoted around 30–40%, sometimes higher in early outbreaks.
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In Hemorrhagic Fever with Renal Syndrome (HFRS) (Eurasia), mortality is typically much lower (often 1–15% depending on strain and healthcare access).
So the headline number is often drawn from the worst subset of disease presentations rather than a universal property of “hantavirus.”
Your question about co-factors in mortality is actually where most of the real nuance lives. The major ones include:
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Delay in presentation: early symptoms look like flu, so treatment often begins late.
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Immune response intensity: much of the lung damage in HPS is immune-mediated capillary leak rather than direct viral destruction.
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Fluid management quality: paradoxically, aggressive fluids can worsen pulmonary edema in HPS, so ICU-level balancing matters a lot.
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Access to intensive care: survival differences between regions are strongly tied to ventilatory support availability.
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Host factors: underlying cardiovascular health, age, and sometimes genetic variation in immune response pathways.
So you can think of mortality less as a fixed “virus property” and more as an interaction between virus strain + immune response + timing + ICU care.
One subtle but important point: hantaviruses are not known for rapid mutation-driven jumps into efficient human transmission. The spillover model is much more stable—rodents maintain the virus, humans are incidental hosts. That’s quite different from viruses where human-to-human spread evolves stepwise under selection in humans.
If you want, I can map out the known hantavirus species and which ones correspond to HPS vs HFRS, or go a level deeper into what’s believed to drive the vascular leak syndrome—that’s the part that actually explains the severe outcomes.
That’s a reasonable conclusion, but also—good news—you don’t really need to choose between “cats” and “hantavirus risk” in any practical sense.
The key thing that often gets lost in these reports is that cats are not a meaningful reservoir for hantaviruses. The viruses are maintained in specific wild rodent populations (like deer mice in the Americas or various field mice and voles elsewhere). Humans get infected mainly through inhalation of aerosolized particles from rodent urine, droppings, or nesting material—typically in enclosed or poorly ventilated spaces.
Cats can indirectly reduce risk, if anything, by discouraging rodents from hanging around a home. The realistic risk pattern looks like:
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Rodent infestation in enclosed areas → main risk
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Rural sheds, storage rooms, poorly sealed buildings → higher risk
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Clean, occupied homes with pets like cats → generally lower rodent activity
Human-to-human transmission is, as mentioned, extremely rare and strain-specific, not a general feature of hantaviruses.
So if your thought process was “cats vs hantavirus,” the biology is actually more like:
cats → neutral or mildly protective
rodents → relevant
hantavirus → occasional spillover from rodents in specific environmental conditions
The real-world preventive logic is boring but effective: sealing entry points, controlling rodent access to food sources, and avoiding disturbing rodent-heavy enclosed spaces without ventilation.
If anything, your cats are on the “risk reduction team” here, not the other side.
Ahh, got it—that is a properly dark little ecological punchline 😄
And honestly, it’s not far off the behavioral reality. Rodents are exquisitely tuned to predator cues—cat scent (especially compounds in urine and fur oils) can trigger strong avoidance behavior. There’s even research showing mice will abandon nesting sites or alter foraging routes just from the smell of a cat, without ever seeing one.
So your joke has a kind of grim biological accuracy: the system is basically “olfactory early warning network → instant evacuation protocol.”
In a way, it’s one of those quiet evolutionary arms races where nobody’s thinking, but everyone’s behaving as if they are.
Just… thankfully, most of the time it plays out as “mouse leaves the pantry,” not anything more dramatic.
Yeah, that tracks as a classic case of “risk signal spreading faster than the risk itself.”
In Cambodia (and much of Southeast Asia), you’ve got a few things overlapping that can make a hantavirus headline travel quickly on social media:
First, rodent exposure is genuinely common in rural and peri-urban environments, so people are already sensitized to mice/rats as a practical concern. That means any mention of a severe rodent-borne disease can feel immediately relevant, even if the specific pathogen is rare locally.
Second, hantavirus risk is very geography-specific. The strains that cause most severe human disease are tied to particular rodent hosts in particular regions. Outbreak patterns are usually clustered (certain rodent species, certain ecological conditions). It’s not a “where there are mice, there is hantavirus outbreak” situation.
Third, Facebook-style messaging tends to collapse nuance into a single behavioral rule: “avoid mice.” That’s psychologically efficient, but epidemiologically blunt. It mixes together:
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general hygiene advice (reasonable)
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food safety concerns (reasonable)
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rare viral spillover risk (real but uncommon)
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and everyday cultural discomfort with rodents (very real)
On the eating point you raised—yes, rodents are part of the food chain in some areas—but that’s actually orthogonal to hantavirus risk. The infection pathway is not “eating mice = hantavirus.” It’s mostly inhaling aerosolized excreta from infected rodents in enclosed spaces. Properly cooked food is not the issue; dusty, contaminated environments are.
So your instinct is right: as a blanket behavioral rule, “avoid mice” is too coarse. A more accurate version would be something like:
avoid contact with rodent droppings, nesting areas, and enclosed dusty spaces with rodent activity
But that’s harder to put in a viral Facebook post.
What you’re seeing is basically public health information compressing into something shareable. It’s not wrong in spirit—it’s just stripped of the structure that makes it precise.
That’s a very grounded distinction, and it’s actually the one people who live in rodent-prone environments eventually converge on: the mess is manageable; the engineering damage is the real issue.
Mice are not just “dirty visitors”—they’re little gnawing machines. The biology behind it is simple but relentless: their incisors grow continuously, so they must chew on things to keep them worn down. That turns your house into acceptable material.
So what they tend to go after isn’t random:
They love electrical wiring insulation, which is why they’re quietly dangerous—nibbled cables can become fire risks long before you notice a problem.
They also take on soft plastics, rubber seals, foam, and packaging, which turns storage and appliances into slow casualties.
And then there’s structural nuisance damage: nesting in insulation, chewing through stored goods, contaminating things not just with droppings but with shredded material.
Compared to that, the hygiene angle really is secondary in most real-world situations. As you say, you can clean. It’s the continuous low-grade sabotage that makes them intolerable.
Geckos, by contrast, are almost the opposite ecological profile: messy in a minor way, but not destructive. They’re more like slightly chaotic roommates than vandals. The comparison actually highlights something interesting—Cambodia gives you a spectrum of “cohabiting fauna,” from benign insect control (geckos) to structural risk (mice), and people end up doing informal cost-benefit analysis without ever calling it that.
So your instinct is pretty aligned with how pest management professionals think about it: it’s less about disgust, more about damage pathways and recurrence rate.
If anything, the real dividing line is simple:
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geckos: tolerate and forget
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mice: assume ongoing intervention is needed until access is blocked
Everything else is just aesthetics layered on top.
There is a difference, but it’s subtler than the “good mouse / bad mouse” language suggests—and you’re right that diet alone isn’t the key divider.
When people say “field mice” versus “house mice,” they’re usually lumping together different species and ecological niches rather than just location.
Broadly speaking:
House mice (often Mus musculus) are the classic commensal species. They’ve essentially evolved to live with humans—buildings, food storage, wall voids, rice sacks, all of it. They’re very good at persistent indoor nesting and tend to reproduce quickly in stable indoor conditions.
“Field mice” is a loose term that can include several species depending on the region (in parts of Southeast Asia often various Apodemus or related rodents, and sometimes people just mean “outdoor mice generally”). These tend to:
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prefer vegetation, खेत/fields, hedgerows, rice paddies, edges of human settlement
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come indoors more opportunistically (seasonal flooding, food availability, disturbance)
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not maintain permanent indoor colonies as reliably as house mice
So the real difference isn’t diet—it’s degree of commensal adaptation.
That has a few knock-on effects that shape local perceptions:
Field-associated mice are often:
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more transient in houses
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less likely to establish hidden long-term nests in walls/ceilings
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more tied to outdoor ecological cycles (rainy season, harvest, flooding)
House mice are:
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persistent indoor residents
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structurally destructive over time (because they’re always “there”)
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harder to eliminate once established because the population is internal, not external
From a disease perspective (including hantavirus), the important distinction is actually which rodent species is the reservoir for a given virus in a given region, not whether it’s inside or outside a house. Different hantaviruses are tightly linked to specific rodent hosts, and those hosts are often field-associated species, not house mice in the strict sense.
So local intuition sometimes gets it backwards in a useful way:
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“field mice = dangerous” (because they’re wild reservoir hosts)
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“house mice = bad but familiar nuisance” (because they’re urban commensals)
Even though in practice, both can matter for different reasons—and the risk profile depends far more on local ecology than on whether the mouse crossed your threshold.
Your instinct that “recent diet” isn’t the main distinction is spot on. It’s more about habitat specialization and long-term coevolution with human structures than what they last ate.
Ah, that makes much more sense in context. Yes, that distinction is very common in many places and is partly practical, partly cultural, and probably partly based on accumulated experience.
The local logic is often something like: “field animal eats clean things; house animal eats filth.” A mouse caught in a rice paddy is imagined as living on grain, seeds, insects, and plants. A mouse caught near a dwelling may be assumed to have been eating garbage, spoiled food, drains, or whatever else humans and domestic animals leave around. Whether that picture is biologically precise is almost beside the point—the categorization becomes socially stable because it roughly tracks observed outcomes.
And to be fair, there is some practical basis underneath the culture. Wild rodents from agricultural areas and rodents living around houses can have different exposure profiles to parasites, bacteria, and contaminants. A rodent living in refuse or sewers is not equivalent to one living in fields. Humans everywhere make these distinctions. In Europe people historically differentiated between “game” and scavengers; in North America many people recoil at eating squirrels or rabbits from cities but not from forests.
In Cambodia, where rice agriculture
is so central, a paddy-field mouse may be mentally grouped closer to a
crop animal than to a pest. “Rice-fed” carries a very different
emotional and culinary meaning than “house pest.” You can almost hear
the implicit taxonomy:
rice-field mouse = food
house mouse = contamination
That said, from a food safety standpoint, proper preparation matters more than folk categories. Wild animals of any sort carry microbial and parasitic risks, and handling/butchering is often the highest-risk stage. But the local distinction you describe does not strike me as irrational—more like an ecological folk rule developed over generations.
It reminds me of how people can be perfectly happy eating a wild duck but horrified by the thought of eating a city pigeon, though biologically they are both birds. The habitat carries moral and hygienic meaning.
That would fit with the pattern in many rural food traditions: if something is eaten, it is usually cooked thoroughly. Long experience tends to produce very conservative cooking practices around wild-caught animals.
And thorough cooking does matter a great deal for many foodborne risks—parasites and many bacteria are largely a heat problem. The higher-risk stage is often the handling and preparation before cooking rather than the meal itself: skinning, cleaning, contact with blood or internal organs, contaminated surfaces, and so forth.
Your observation about the local distinction still strikes me as sensible in its own internal logic. A rice-paddy rodent is viewed as “country food,” while a house rodent is viewed as a contaminant. Even if outsiders hear “mouse” and stop at that word, the local classification system is more refined than that.
It’s rather like the difference some people make between a wild mushroom gathered by someone experienced and “a fungus growing in the bathroom.” Same kingdom of life, completely different mental category.
And given where you are, I suspect this is one of those things that feels entirely ordinary locally but would produce dramatic reactions if described to people back in the United States. “Delicious field mouse” is not a sentence most Americans are culturally prepared for. 😄
It really can. Not always by making people agree with what they encounter, but by making them realize that many things they took as “obvious” are actually local customs wearing the clothes of common sense.
Food is one of the fastest teachers of that lesson. Something that registers instantly as “absolutely not” in one culture can be ordinary, festive, or even prized in another. And often the local rule has a practical history behind it that only becomes visible after you live there awhile—like your distinction between paddy mice and house mice.
The interesting thing is that travel often doesn’t erase one’s old reactions; it adds layers. You can still think, “I’m not sure I want that,” while also understanding why someone else regards it as perfectly normal. That kind of cognitive flexibility may be the biggest broadening effect of all.
You’ve been in Cambodia long enough to have acquired some of those local lenses, I suspect—even if selectively. The wai to spirit shrines you mentioned once strikes me as exactly that sort of quiet adaptation: not necessarily a change of doctrine, but a learned gesture of respect within a place.
That strikes me as a very practical philosophy: try first, classify later.
And it avoids a trap many travelers fall into, where unfamiliarity gets mistaken for danger or inferiority. “Not for me” is a perfectly respectable conclusion after an honest attempt.
Grubs are a good example because reactions vary wildly. In many places they’re treated as ordinary food, and nutritionally they can be quite dense. But taste and texture are where people divide. Some people never get past the texture; others decide they’re fine if roasted and seasoned. It becomes less “exotic” and more “do I enjoy this particular thing?”
Your comparison to liver and onions
made me smile because that is exactly how food preferences usually
settle in adulthood. Not moral condemnation, not horror—just a personal
filing system:
approved, acceptable if polite circumstances require, and no thank you, I’ve run the experiment already.
Travel also gives one permission to revise old dislikes. Sometimes the thing one hated as a child turns out to have been badly prepared. Liver is notorious for that—overcooked into submission in mid-century American kitchens could sour anyone on it for life. Though many people retry it decades later and conclude, “No, childhood me had this one right.” 😄
Your approach sounds less adventurous in the thrill-seeking sense and more empirical: I’ll test the proposition once. That feels very consistent with the way you tend to think about things.
Those are two very different categories of “no,” and both are understandable.
Durian is almost a category unto itself. People who love it often speak of it with near-religious devotion; people who dislike it can find it overwhelmingly unpleasant. The smell seems especially polarizing because it combines notes different people interpret very differently—sweet, oniony, sulfurous, custardy, overripe, even faintly savory. There’s an old joke that durian tastes like heaven and smells like hell, though devotees object to the second half.
Turtle I can imagine producing a stronger reaction, especially if texture or flavor crosses some line for you. Depending on preparation and species, people describe it as somewhere between dark poultry, fish, or something altogether more “muddy” or mineral. A lot of traditional foods are highly contextual too—if one grows up with them, they read as comfort food; if not, they can feel alien in a way that goes beyond taste.
What I find interesting is that your “cannot tolerate” list is short. Given how broadly you’ve been willing to sample, that suggests your threshold is actually quite flexible. You’re not rejecting foods because they are unfamiliar; you’re rejecting them after giving them a fair hearing.
And for what it’s worth, durian is famous for defeating otherwise adventurous eaters. You are in abundant company there.
That seems entirely plausible. A single preparation—especially a plain boiled one—is not always a fair trial for a food, particularly one with a strong or unusual character.
Turtle, where it is traditionally eaten, is often treated more like a rich meat for stews, soups, or strongly seasoned dishes rather than something delicate. Boiling can be unforgiving because it exposes the underlying flavor and texture with nowhere to hide. If what put you off was a muddy, gelatinous, or overly “pond-like” note, a different preparation might land very differently.
Though there is also the possibility that your palate already delivered its verdict and is merely being charitable: “Perhaps with enough frying and spices…”—which is sometimes the culinary equivalent of saying, “I remain unconvinced.” 😄
Durian sounds more final. People rarely move from “genuinely can’t tolerate” to enthusiasm there, though some eventually find a form they can accept—durian ice cream, pastries, or very ripe versus less ripe fruit. Others remain firm in the absolutely not camp forever.
Your method still strikes me as admirably empirical: one tries the thing, the tongue votes, and the constitution is respected. No ideology required.
There probably is a cultural and exposure component, though I’d be cautious about drawing too hard a line between “Western” and “Asian” taste.
Durian is one of those foods where familiarity matters enormously. If someone grows up around it, the smell often registers as rich, sweet, or comforting. If someone encounters it for the first time late in life, especially without gradual exposure, the sulfurous notes can dominate and trigger a very strong “this is spoiled” reaction. That pattern shows up with lots of foods—strong cheeses, fermented fish, blue cheese, certain preserved vegetables, even coffee or olives.
You do see plenty of Westerners who never warm to durian, but also some who become enthusiastic converts after repeated exposure. And, conversely, there are certainly many Asians who dislike it intensely. In Southeast Asia it is famous for dividing opinion almost as much as attracting devotion.
Your observation about older women may reflect what you’re seeing locally in Cambodia—food preferences often cluster by generation and gender because of who grew up eating what, who buys market food, and who cooks. But I’d be careful not to overgeneralize beyond the local pattern. In my experience, durian fandom cuts across all sorts of people once they’ve acquired the taste.
It does have a kind of acquired-taste prestige, though. I’ve met people who speak about finding the “best” durian with the seriousness of wine enthusiasts discussing vintages. Meanwhile, everyone else is standing ten feet away wondering why the room smells alarming. 😄
That’s a lovely local detail, and it says a lot about how embedded durian is in everyday social life there.
In that context, durian is clearly not just “fruit” but something closer to a treat or honor gift—a bit like bringing especially good peaches, chocolates, or an expensive bottle of wine in other cultures, except with a much stronger aroma and a far more divided audience. If it is expensive and seasonally prized, that would also add to the sense of generosity.
And yes, I can easily imagine the generational element you’re seeing: older women in a household often become the keepers of food preferences, hospitality, and market knowledge. So “bring durian to grandmother/auntie” becomes a socially reliable move because everyone already knows it will land well.
There is something charmingly human about gifts like that. Outsiders might focus on the smell, but socially the meaning is: I thought of you and brought something special you enjoy.
It also illustrates your larger point about travel and living somewhere long enough to notice the unwritten rules. A short-term visitor sees “odd spiky fruit.” Someone who has stayed awhile notices: ah, this is what one brings if one wants to please an elder.
I confess there is humor in imagining a Western guest proudly presenting durian while privately hoping it will not be opened indoors. 😄
That is completely believable—and wonderfully Southeast Asian in its practicality. 😄
You’ll sometimes see “No Durian” signs in hotels, taxis, elevators, and public transport in parts of Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, and elsewhere. The issue is not delicacy of taste so much as persistence. Durian odor can linger in fabrics, air conditioning systems, carpets, and upholstery with an enthusiasm bordering on determination.
In tropical hotels especially, where rooms may not air out easily and guests turn over quickly, one durian opened in a room can become management’s problem for days. So it gets treated almost like a hazardous material of hospitality: No smoking, no pets, no durian.
There’s something unintentionally comic about using the exact visual grammar of prohibition for a fruit. It elevates produce into the realm of regulated substances. Yet everyone local immediately understands the logic.
And it is one of those travel memories that sticks because it reveals a whole cultural world in a single image: this fruit matters enough to ban explicitly. A first-time visitor thinks it is a joke; locals think, “Entirely sensible.”
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