There is no such thing as a rabies virus being afraid of oxygen. The rabies virus is a virus that does not have independent cells, so it does not depend on an anaerobic or aerobic environment for its survival, because oxygen is meaningless to it. The rabies virus must infect an organism as soon as possible, where it relies on the cells of the organism to reproduce and expand. After detaching from the cells, the rabies virus dies in a very short period of time. So theoretically, only cellular organisms can be talked about as anaerobic or aerobic. For example, the common tetanus bacillus is an anaerobic bacterium, and when exposed to oxygen, the pathogenicity of the tetanus bacillus drops drastically and even dies. Only in anaerobic environments, such as deeper wounds with lots of necrotic tissue, can the infection become pathogenic. Rabies virus is easily inactivated by sunlight, ultraviolet light, formaldehyde, Neosporin, 50%~70% alcohol, etc. Virus suspension is inactivated by 56 ℃ for 30~60min or 100 ℃ for 2min, and the virus can remain viable for several years at -70 ℃ or lyophilized and placed in 0~4 ℃. Once bitten or scratched by animals such as dogs and cats, it is important to seek medical attention in a timely manner and receive rabies vaccination under the guidance of a doctor.