ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Daniel Streicker - Animal-borne disease researcher
Daniel Streicker investigates how everyday killer pathogens can provide insight into future outbreaks of infectious disease.

Why you should listen

Daniel Streicker uses ecology and evolution to reveal, anticipate and prevent infectious disease transmission between species. His research uses a range of approaches including longitudinal field studies in wild bats, phylodynamics, machine learning, metagenomicsand epidemiological modeling. In Peru, Streicker uses bat and virus genetics to connect bats' movements with the spread of rabies virus. With this technique, he and his team are able to forecast outbreaks before they begin, providing valuable lead times for governments to take preventative actions, such as vaccinating humans and livestock ahead of outbreaks.

Streicker is a Wellcome Trust senior research fellow and head of the Streicker Group at the University of Glasgow Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine and the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research.

More profile about the speaker
Daniel Streicker | Speaker | TED.com
TEDMED 2018

Daniel Streicker: What vaccinating vampire bats can teach us about pandemics

Filmed:
1,381,812 views

Could we anticipate the next big disease outbreak, stopping a virus like Ebola before it ever strikes? In this talk about frontline scientific research, ecologist Daniel Streicker takes us to the Amazon rainforest in Peru where he tracks the movement of vampire bats in order to forecast and prevent rabies outbreaks. By studying these disease patterns, Streicker shows how we could learn to cut off the next pandemic at its source.
- Animal-borne disease researcher
Daniel Streicker investigates how everyday killer pathogens can provide insight into future outbreaks of infectious disease. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:13
The story that I'm going
to tell you today,
0
1098
2001
00:15
for me, began back in 2006.
1
3123
1940
00:17
That was when I first heard
about an outbreak of mysterious illness
2
5422
3708
00:21
that was happening in the Amazon
rainforest of Peru.
3
9154
2716
00:24
The people that were getting sick
from this illness,
4
12947
2429
00:27
they had horrifying symptoms, nightmarish.
5
15400
2545
00:29
They had unbelievable headaches,
6
17969
1530
00:31
they couldn't eat or drink.
7
19523
1600
00:33
Some of them were even hallucinating --
8
21147
1920
00:35
confused and aggressive.
9
23091
1187
00:36
The most tragic part of all
10
24953
2255
00:39
was that many of the victims
were children.
11
27232
2180
00:41
And of all of those that got sick,
12
29436
2245
00:43
none survived.
13
31705
1284
00:46
It turned out that what was killing
people was a virus,
14
34587
2772
00:49
but it wasn't Ebola, it wasn't Zika,
15
37383
2205
00:51
it wasn't even some new virus
never before seen by science.
16
39612
3126
00:55
These people were dying
of an ancient killer,
17
43848
2127
00:57
one that we've known about for centuries.
18
45999
2099
01:00
They were dying of rabies.
19
48492
1387
01:02
And what all of them had in common
was that as they slept,
20
50807
3530
01:06
they'd all been bitten by the only mammal
that lives exclusively on a diet of blood:
21
54361
4221
01:10
the vampire bat.
22
58606
1150
01:13
These sorts of outbreaks
that jump from bats into people,
23
61073
3178
01:16
they've become more and more common
in the last couple of decades.
24
64275
3134
01:19
In 2003, it was SARS.
25
67433
1520
01:20
It showed up in Chinese animal markets
and spread globally.
26
68977
2769
01:24
That virus, like the one from Peru,
was eventually traced back to bats,
27
72462
4065
01:28
which have probably harbored it,
undetected, for centuries.
28
76551
2842
01:32
Then, 10 years later, we see Ebola
showing up in West Africa,
29
80249
4314
01:36
and that surprised just about everybody
30
84587
1925
01:38
because, according
to the science at the time,
31
86536
2167
01:40
Ebola wasn't really supposed
to be in West Africa.
32
88727
2372
01:44
That ended up causing the largest
and most widespread Ebola outbreak
33
92115
3191
01:47
in history.
34
95330
1177
01:49
So there's a disturbing trend here, right?
35
97697
2448
01:52
Deadly viruses are appearing in places
where we can't really expect them,
36
100169
4078
01:56
and as a global health community,
37
104271
1593
01:57
we're caught on our heels.
38
105888
1516
01:59
We're constantly chasing
after the next viral emergency
39
107428
2653
02:02
in this perpetual cycle,
40
110105
2226
02:04
always trying to extinguish epidemics
after they've already started.
41
112355
3253
02:08
So with new diseases appearing every year,
42
116360
2857
02:11
now is really the time
43
119241
1808
02:13
that we need to start thinking
about what we can do about it.
44
121073
2884
02:15
If we just wait for the next
Ebola to happen,
45
123981
2129
02:18
we might not be so lucky next time.
46
126134
1897
02:20
We might face a different virus,
47
128427
1646
02:22
one that's more deadly,
48
130097
1379
02:23
one that spreads better among people,
49
131500
2529
02:26
or maybe one that just completely
outwits our vaccines,
50
134053
3160
02:29
leaving us defenseless.
51
137237
1500
02:31
So can we anticipate pandemics?
52
139706
2953
02:34
Can we stop them?
53
142683
1166
02:36
Those are really hard questions to answer,
54
144480
3122
02:39
and the reason is that the pandemics --
55
147626
2559
02:42
the ones that spread globally,
56
150209
1771
02:44
the ones that we really
want to anticipate --
57
152004
2155
02:46
they're actually really rare events.
58
154183
2059
02:48
And for us as a species
that is a good thing --
59
156266
2388
02:50
that's why we're all here.
60
158678
1515
02:53
But from a scientific standpoint,
it's a little bit of a problem.
61
161241
4333
02:58
That's because if something
happens just once or twice,
62
166783
2610
03:01
that's really not enough
to find any patterns.
63
169417
2158
03:03
Patterns that could tell us when
or where the next pandemic might strike.
64
171599
3479
03:08
So what do we do?
65
176131
1362
03:10
Well, I think one of the solutions
we may have is to study some viruses
66
178186
4687
03:14
that routinely jump from wild
animals into people,
67
182897
3580
03:18
or into our pets, or our livestock,
68
186501
2994
03:21
even if they're not the same viruses
69
189519
2100
03:23
that we think are going
to cause pandemics.
70
191643
2024
03:26
If we can use
those everyday killer viruses
71
194449
2418
03:28
to work out some of the patterns
72
196891
1592
03:30
of what drives that initial, crucial jump
from one species to the next,
73
198507
3935
03:34
and, potentially, how we might stop it,
74
202466
2244
03:36
then we're going to end up better prepared
75
204734
2022
03:38
for those viruses that jump
between species more rarely
76
206780
2851
03:41
but pose a greater threat of pandemics.
77
209655
2031
03:44
Now, rabies, as terrible as it is,
78
212486
2919
03:47
turns out to be a pretty nice
virus in this case.
79
215429
3214
03:52
You see, rabies is a scary, deadly virus.
80
220034
2889
03:55
It has 100 percent fatality.
81
223850
1495
03:57
That means if you get infected with rabies
and you don't get treated early,
82
225369
3732
04:01
there's nothing that can be done.
83
229125
1728
04:02
There is no cure.
84
230877
1151
04:04
You will die.
85
232052
1150
04:06
And rabies is not just
a problem of the past either.
86
234801
3105
04:10
Even today, rabies still kills
50 to 60,000 people every year.
87
238821
4522
04:16
Just put that number in some perspective.
88
244481
2028
04:19
Imagine the whole West African
Ebola outbreak --
89
247188
2761
04:21
about two-and-a-half years;
90
249973
1607
04:23
you condense all the people
that died in that outbreak
91
251604
2553
04:26
into just a single year.
92
254181
1288
04:27
That's pretty bad.
93
255493
1151
04:28
But then, you multiply it by four,
94
256668
1929
04:30
and that's what happens
with rabies every single year.
95
258621
2832
04:35
So what sets rabies apart
from a virus like Ebola
96
263835
4432
04:40
is that when people get it,
97
268291
1763
04:42
they tend not to spread it onward.
98
270078
1716
04:44
That means that every single time
a person gets rabies,
99
272965
3998
04:48
it's because they were bitten
by a rabid animal,
100
276987
2284
04:51
and usually, that's a dog or a bat.
101
279295
1682
04:53
But it also means that those jumps
between species,
102
281354
3186
04:56
which are so important to understand,
but so rare for most viruses,
103
284564
4302
05:00
for rabies, they're actually
happening by the thousands.
104
288890
2740
05:04
So in a way, rabies
is almost like the fruit fly
105
292527
3645
05:08
or the lab mouse of deadly viruses.
106
296196
2288
05:11
This is a virus that we can use
and study to find patterns
107
299168
4069
05:15
and potentially test out new solutions.
108
303261
1944
05:17
And so, when I first heard
about that outbreak of rabies
109
305970
2803
05:20
in the Peruvian Amazon,
110
308797
1357
05:22
it struck me as something
potentially powerful
111
310178
2198
05:24
because this was a virus that was jumping
from bats into other animals
112
312400
3358
05:27
often enough that we might
be able to anticipate it ...
113
315782
3461
05:31
Maybe even stop it.
114
319267
1179
05:33
So as a first-year graduate student
115
321354
2384
05:35
with a vague memory
of my high school Spanish class,
116
323762
2695
05:38
I jumped onto a plane
and flew off to Peru,
117
326481
2620
05:41
looking for vampire bats.
118
329125
1823
05:42
And the first couple of years
of this project were really tough.
119
330972
3698
05:48
I had no shortage of ambitious plans
to rid Latin America of rabies,
120
336125
3935
05:52
but at the same time,
121
340084
1562
05:53
there seemed to be an equally endless
supply of mudslides and flat tires,
122
341670
3721
05:57
power outages, stomach bugs
all stopping me.
123
345415
3195
06:01
But that was kind of par for the course,
124
349262
2218
06:03
working in South America,
125
351504
1453
06:04
and to me, it was part of the adventure.
126
352981
2017
06:08
But what kept me going
127
356044
2641
06:10
was the knowledge that for the first time,
128
358709
2000
06:12
the work that I was doing
might actually have some real impact
129
360733
2907
06:15
on people's lives in the short term.
130
363664
1766
06:17
And that struck me the most
131
365454
1354
06:18
when we actually went out to the Amazon
132
366832
2200
06:21
and were trying to catch vampire bats.
133
369056
2076
06:23
You see, all we had to do was show up
at a village and ask around.
134
371680
3575
06:27
"Who's been getting bitten
by a bat lately?"
135
375279
2374
06:29
And people raised their hands,
136
377677
2220
06:31
because in these communities,
137
379921
2418
06:34
getting bitten by a bat
is an everyday occurrence,
138
382363
2335
06:36
happens every day.
139
384722
1150
06:38
And so all we had to do
was go to the right house,
140
386530
3145
06:41
open up a net
141
389699
1474
06:43
and show up at night,
142
391197
1151
06:44
and wait until the bats tried
to fly in and feed on human blood.
143
392372
3242
06:49
So to me, seeing a child with a bite wound
on his head or blood stains on his sheets,
144
397050
5681
06:54
that was more than enough motivation
145
402755
1916
06:56
to get past whatever logistical
or physical headache
146
404695
2470
06:59
I happened to be feeling on that day.
147
407189
2183
07:02
Since we were working
all night long, though,
148
410896
2156
07:05
I had plenty of time to think about
how I might actually solve this problem,
149
413076
3582
07:08
and it stood out to me
that there were two burning questions.
150
416682
3077
07:11
The first was that we know
that people are bitten all the time,
151
419783
3906
07:15
but rabies outbreaks
aren't happening all the time --
152
423713
2478
07:18
every couple of years,
maybe even every decade,
153
426215
2321
07:20
you get a rabies outbreak.
154
428560
1776
07:22
So if we could somehow anticipate
when and where the next outbreak would be,
155
430360
3963
07:26
that would be a real opportunity,
156
434347
1596
07:27
meaning we could vaccinate
people ahead of time,
157
435967
2261
07:30
before anybody starts dying.
158
438252
1404
07:32
But the other side of that coin
159
440181
2436
07:34
is that vaccination
is really just a Band-Aid.
160
442641
3270
07:38
It's kind of a strategy of damage control.
161
446303
2062
07:40
Of course it's lifesaving and important
and we have to do it,
162
448389
2866
07:43
but at the end of the day,
163
451279
1281
07:44
no matter how many cows,
how many people we vaccinate,
164
452584
2595
07:47
we're still going to have exactly the same
amount of rabies up there in the bats.
165
455203
3897
07:51
The actual risk of getting bitten
hasn't changed at all.
166
459124
2621
07:53
So my second question was this:
167
461769
1625
07:55
Could we somehow
cut the virus off at its source?
168
463418
3212
07:59
If we could somehow reduce the amount
of rabies in the bats themselves,
169
467179
3365
08:02
then that would be a real game changer.
170
470568
2043
08:04
We'd been talking about shifting
171
472635
1777
08:06
from a strategy of damage control
to one based on prevention.
172
474436
3012
08:10
So, how do we begin to do that?
173
478687
2649
08:13
Well, the first thing
we needed to understand
174
481360
2119
08:15
was how this virus actually works
in its natural host --
175
483503
2634
08:18
in the bats.
176
486161
1166
08:19
And that is a tall order
for any infectious disease,
177
487351
2449
08:21
particularly one in a reclusive
species like bats,
178
489824
3883
08:25
but we had to start somewhere.
179
493731
1642
08:28
So the way we started
was looking at some historical data.
180
496368
2862
08:31
When and where had these outbreaks
happened in the past?
181
499691
2740
08:35
And it became clear
that rabies was a virus
182
503154
2776
08:37
that just had to be on the move.
183
505954
1536
08:39
It couldn't sit still.
184
507514
1150
08:41
The virus might circulate in one area
for a year, maybe two,
185
509449
2879
08:44
but unless it found a new group of bats
to infect somewhere else,
186
512352
3101
08:47
it was pretty much bound to go extinct.
187
515477
2021
08:50
So with that, we solved one key part
of the rabies transmission challenge.
188
518359
4854
08:55
We knew we were dealing
with a virus on the move,
189
523898
2286
08:58
but we still couldn't say
where it was going.
190
526208
2096
09:01
Essentially, what I wanted was
more of a Google Maps-style prediction,
191
529284
4057
09:05
which is, "What's
the destination of the virus?
192
533365
2360
09:07
What's the route it's going
to take to get there?
193
535749
2337
09:10
How fast will it move?"
194
538110
1660
09:13
To do that, I turned
to the genomes of rabies.
195
541291
3443
09:17
You see, rabies, like many other viruses,
has a tiny little genome,
196
545278
4091
09:21
but one that evolves
really, really quickly.
197
549393
2069
09:23
So quickly that by the time the virus
has moved from one point to the next,
198
551903
4397
09:28
it's going to have picked up
a couple of new mutations.
199
556324
2729
09:31
And so all we have to do
is kind of connect the dots
200
559077
2756
09:33
across an evolutionary tree,
201
561857
1761
09:35
and that's going to tell us
where the virus has been in the past
202
563642
3001
09:38
and how it spread across the landscape.
203
566667
1903
09:40
So, I went out and I collected cow brains,
204
568989
3158
09:44
because that's where
you get rabies viruses.
205
572171
2126
09:47
And from genome sequences that we got
from the viruses in those cow brains,
206
575088
4916
09:52
I was able to work out
207
580028
1151
09:53
that this is a virus that spreads
between 10 and 20 miles each year.
208
581203
3202
09:57
OK, so that means we do now have
the speed limit of the virus,
209
585147
3957
10:01
but still missing that other key part
of where is it going in the first place.
210
589128
4299
10:06
For that, I needed to think
a little bit more like a bat,
211
594362
4368
10:10
because rabies is a virus --
212
598754
1334
10:12
it doesn't move by itself,
213
600112
1239
10:13
it has to be moved around by its bat host,
214
601375
3072
10:16
so I needed to think about
how far to fly and how often to fly.
215
604471
3979
10:20
My imagination didn't get me
all that far with this
216
608474
2847
10:23
and neither did little digital trackers
that we first tried putting on bats.
217
611345
3604
10:26
We just couldn't get
the information we needed.
218
614973
2334
10:29
So instead, we turned
to the mating patterns of bats.
219
617331
2651
10:32
We could look at certain parts
of the bat genome,
220
620006
2318
10:34
and they were telling us that some
groups of bats were mating with each other
221
622348
3620
10:37
and others were more isolated.
222
625992
1435
10:39
And the virus was basically following
the trail laid out by the bat genomes.
223
627451
4232
10:44
Yet one of those trails stood out
as being a little bit surprising --
224
632884
3403
10:48
hard to believe.
225
636311
1150
10:50
That was one that seemed to cross
straight over the Peruvian Andes,
226
638176
3799
10:53
crossing from the Amazon
to the Pacific coast,
227
641999
2295
10:56
and that was kind of hard to believe,
228
644318
2417
10:58
as I said,
229
646759
2230
11:01
because the Andes are really tall --
about 22,000 feet,
230
649013
3222
11:04
and that's way too high
for a vampire to fly.
231
652259
2566
11:08
Yet --
232
656136
1150
11:09
(Laughter)
233
657310
1072
11:10
when we looked more closely,
234
658406
1354
11:11
we saw, in the northern part of Peru,
235
659784
1803
11:13
a network of valley systems
that was not quite too tall
236
661611
3607
11:17
for the bats on either side
to be mating with each other.
237
665242
2756
11:20
And we looked a little bit more closely --
238
668022
2000
11:22
sure enough, there's rabies
spreading through those valleys,
239
670046
2810
11:24
just about 10 miles each year.
240
672880
1665
11:26
Basically, exactly as our evolutionary
models had predicated it would be.
241
674569
3475
11:30
What I didn't tell you
242
678531
1174
11:31
is that that's actually
kind of an important thing
243
679729
2404
11:34
because rabies had never been seen before
on the western slopes of the Andes,
244
682157
3701
11:37
or on the whole Pacific coast
of South America,
245
685882
2789
11:40
so we were actually witnessing,
in real time, a historical first invasion
246
688695
4026
11:44
into a pretty big part of South America,
247
692745
2951
11:47
which raises the key question:
248
695720
1429
11:49
"What are we going to do about that?"
249
697173
2010
11:51
Well, the obvious short-term
thing we can do is tell people:
250
699719
3306
11:55
you need to vaccinate yourselves,
vaccinate your animals;
251
703049
2670
11:57
rabies is coming.
252
705743
1200
11:59
But in the longer term,
253
707507
1397
12:00
it would be even more powerful
if we could use that new information
254
708928
3230
12:04
to stop the virus
from arriving altogether.
255
712182
2334
12:07
Of course, we can't just tell bats,
"Don't fly today,"
256
715847
3187
12:11
but maybe we could stop the virus
from hitching a ride along with the bat.
257
719058
3594
12:16
And that brings us to the key lesson
that we have learned
258
724347
3129
12:19
from rabies-management programs
all around the world,
259
727500
2830
12:22
whether it's dogs, foxes,
skunks, raccoons,
260
730354
4390
12:26
North America, Africa, Europe.
261
734768
2789
12:29
It's that vaccinating the animal source
is the only thing that stops rabies.
262
737581
3593
12:34
So, can we vaccinate bats?
263
742204
3188
12:38
You hear about vaccinating dogs
and cats all the time,
264
746597
2525
12:41
but you don't hear too much
about vaccinating bats.
265
749146
2457
12:44
It might sound like a crazy question,
266
752597
2050
12:46
but the good news is that we actually
already have edible rabies vaccines
267
754671
5174
12:51
that are specially designed for bats.
268
759869
1862
12:54
And what's even better
269
762351
1623
12:55
is that these vaccines
can actually spread from bat to bat.
270
763998
3821
13:00
All you have to do is smear it on one
271
768499
2467
13:02
and let the bats' habit
of grooming each other
272
770990
2198
13:05
take care of the rest of the work for you.
273
773212
2005
13:07
So that means, at the very least,
274
775241
2243
13:09
we don't have to be out there vaccinating
millions of bats one by one
275
777508
3239
13:12
with tiny little syringes.
276
780771
1501
13:14
(Laughter)
277
782296
1589
13:15
But just because we have that tool
doesn't mean we know how to use it.
278
783909
3509
13:19
Now we have a whole laundry
list of questions.
279
787442
2355
13:21
How many bats do we need to vaccinate?
280
789821
2096
13:23
What time of the year
do we need to be vaccinating?
281
791941
2427
13:26
How many times a year
do we need to be vaccinating?
282
794392
2522
13:30
All of these are questions
that are really fundamental
283
798067
2542
13:32
to rolling out any sort
of vaccination campaign,
284
800633
2243
13:34
but they're questions
that we can't answer in the laboratory.
285
802900
2858
13:37
So instead, we're taking
a slightly more colorful approach.
286
805782
2864
13:41
We're using real wild bats,
but fake vaccines.
287
809250
3645
13:45
We use edible gels that make bat hair glow
288
813795
2416
13:48
and UV powders that spread between
bats when they bump into each other,
289
816235
3603
13:51
and that's letting us study
how well a real vaccine might spread
290
819862
3039
13:54
in these wild colonies of bats.
291
822925
2030
13:57
We're still in the earliest
phases of this work,
292
825908
2343
14:00
but our results so far
are incredibly encouraging.
293
828275
2437
14:03
They're suggesting that using
the vaccines that we already have,
294
831310
3096
14:06
we could potentially drastically reduce
the size of rabies outbreaks.
295
834430
3274
14:10
And that matters, because as you remember,
296
838637
2802
14:13
rabies is a virus that always
has to be on the move,
297
841463
2780
14:16
and so every time we reduce
the size of an outbreak,
298
844267
3115
14:19
we're also reducing the chance
299
847406
1461
14:20
that the virus makes it
onto the next colony.
300
848891
2245
14:23
We're breaking a link
in the chain of transmission.
301
851160
2495
14:26
And so every time we do that,
302
854289
1592
14:27
we're bringing the virus
one step closer to extinction.
303
855905
2877
14:30
And so the thought, for me,
of a world in the not-too-distant future
304
858806
4712
14:35
where we're actually talking
about getting rid of rabies altogether,
305
863542
3271
14:38
that is incredibly
encouraging and exciting.
306
866837
2071
14:41
So let me return to the original question.
307
869631
2164
14:43
Can we prevent pandemics?
308
871819
1484
14:46
Well, there is no silver-bullet
solution to this problem,
309
874119
4100
14:50
but my experiences with rabies
have left me pretty optimistic about it.
310
878243
3435
14:54
I think we're not too far from a future
311
882282
1993
14:56
where we're going to have genomics
to forecast outbreaks
312
884299
3643
14:59
and we're going to have clever
new technologies,
313
887966
2405
15:02
like edible, self-spreading vaccines,
314
890395
2904
15:05
that can get rid of these
viruses at their source
315
893323
2289
15:07
before they have a chance
to jump into people.
316
895636
2271
15:10
So when it comes to fighting pandemics,
317
898926
2137
15:13
the holy grail is just to get
one step ahead.
318
901087
2346
15:16
And if you ask me,
319
904202
1150
15:17
I think one of the ways
that we can do that
320
905376
2000
15:19
is using some of the problems
that we already have now,
321
907400
2583
15:22
like rabies --
322
910007
1232
15:23
sort of the way an astronaut
might use a flight simulator,
323
911263
2761
15:26
figuring out what works and what doesn't,
324
914048
1968
15:28
and building up our tool set
325
916040
1525
15:29
so that when the stakes are high,
326
917589
1598
15:31
we're not flying blind.
327
919211
1248
15:32
Thank you.
328
920884
1151
15:34
(Applause)
329
922059
3857

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Daniel Streicker - Animal-borne disease researcher
Daniel Streicker investigates how everyday killer pathogens can provide insight into future outbreaks of infectious disease.

Why you should listen

Daniel Streicker uses ecology and evolution to reveal, anticipate and prevent infectious disease transmission between species. His research uses a range of approaches including longitudinal field studies in wild bats, phylodynamics, machine learning, metagenomicsand epidemiological modeling. In Peru, Streicker uses bat and virus genetics to connect bats' movements with the spread of rabies virus. With this technique, he and his team are able to forecast outbreaks before they begin, providing valuable lead times for governments to take preventative actions, such as vaccinating humans and livestock ahead of outbreaks.

Streicker is a Wellcome Trust senior research fellow and head of the Streicker Group at the University of Glasgow Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health & Comparative Medicine and the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research.

More profile about the speaker
Daniel Streicker | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee