WattAgNett: Avian influenza hits flocks in Middle East, Italy chickens04-05-2016
Written May 4, 2016 By Jackie Linden During the past two weeks, since an April 19 report on avian influenza, the veterinary authorities of three countries have reported their first outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) to the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE): Iraq, Lebanon and Italy. In France, a three-month ban has begun on the production of foie gras in the region that recently suffered many HPAI outbreaks in ducks and geese. First-time avian flu outbreaks in Middle East and Europe After an absence since January 2015, Italy reported its first outbreak of HPAI at the end of April in the region of Emilia Romagna. The owner of a flock of 17,000 free-range organic layers noticed a spike in mortality over 2-3 days, with 600 deaths in total. The remaining birds have been destroyed and the usual control measures have been introduced, including a three-kilometer protection zone and 10-kilometer surveillance zone around the premises. The cause of the outbreak has been confirmed as the H7N7 subtype of the HPAI virus. Further HPAI outbreaks in Mexico, Ghana, Vietnam, Myanmar and Taiwan With its first HPAI in June 2015, Ghana has reported a further 2 outbreaks in April, both in the south of the country. The first was in a flock of 3,940 layers and growers in Eastern state, while a small laying flock of 252 birds in Western state was affected in the other new outbreak. All surviving birds in both outbreaks have been destroyed. A report in Myanmar Times indicates that 35,000 laying hens have been destroyed after an outbreak of HPAI in Monywa in Sagaing region. H5 and H9 viruses are blamed for the outbreak. After a series of abnormal bird deaths, 1,832 geese at a farm in Tainan in southern Taiwan were culled in late April after an avian flu outbreak was confirmed there, according to Focus Taiwan. An outbreak of LPAI was recently reported in the United States. France bans foie gras production in avian flu-affected region |