Preliminary testing of a commercial broiler flock in Kent County has returned presumptive positive H5 Avian Influenza results from the University of Delaware’s Lasher Laboratory in Georgetown, part of the National Animal Health Laboratory Network.
Additional samples have been sent to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Veterinary Services Laboratory (NVSL) for further confirmation.
State officials have quarantined the affected premises, and the birds on the property are being depopulated to prevent the spread of the disease. Birds from the affected flock will not enter the food system.
Poultry depopulation is the process of ending the life of poultry in a humane way when it’s no longer possible to market, transport, or slaughter them.
Avian influenza is a highly contagious airborne respiratory virus that spreads quickly among birds through nasal and eye secretions and manure. The virus can be spread from flock to flock, including flocks of wild birds, through contact with infected poultry, equipment, and the clothing and shoes of caretakers. This virus affects poultry, like chickens, ducks, and turkeys, and some wild bird species, such as ducks, geese, shorebirds, and raptors.
Last week, Delaware announced presumptive positive H5 results in snow geese found at Prime Hook Beach. The state is still awaiting confirmatory results from NVSL. With the assistance of the public, more than 850 wild birds, a majority of them snow geese but including Canada geese, other waterfowl, vultures, and other birds, were reported dead via the DNREC Division of Fish and Wildlife’s Sick and Dead Wildlife Reporting Form. While some of these may be duplicate reports or deaths due to other causes, officials know that more birds have succumbed to the virus, dying in places out of sight.
To better protect their flocks, poultry producers and backyard flock owners must realize that what occurs in wild birds impacts their birds’ health and that this is not only a problem along Delaware’s coast, which is where many of the reported dead birds have been located so far. In the evening hours, snow geese fly to water to roost, where they can then spread the virus in their flock. Those birds that are not sick or are strong enough to fly in the morning will then take flight, moving inland to open space, including farm fields, to forage. At this time that virus can be introduced to poultry farms and areas where backyard flocks are commingling with wildlife or are not under cover, protecting them from infected wild bird droppings. Snow geese are very mobile, flying as far into Maryland or New Jersey in a day.
Considering this new case and the prevalence of the virus in the wild bird population, all poultry owners need to increase their vigilance in protecting their flocks from contracting avian influenza by following these steps:
If You Have Sick Poultry or Experience Increased Mortality in Your Flock:
Source: delawarelive.com…
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