Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Study sparks doubt about avian flu source


A new study is throwing doubt on the common belief that avian influenza outbreaks across the United States and Canada last year originated with migrating waterfowl.

Researchers at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital say highly-pathogenic avian influenza strains were never detected in wild birds for 43 years and said they found none in 123,000 samples they collected before the 2015 outbreak.

In the United States, the government estimates 43 million farm birds either died or were euthanized; in Canada flocks were sacrificed in the Fraser Valley of British Columbia over the Christmas holidays before 2015 and there were three flocks in Oxford County, Ont., that were infected.

“Although the stamping out strategies adopted by the poultry industry and animal health authorities in Canada and the United States—which included culling, quarantining, increased biosecurity, and abstention from vaccine use—were successful in eradicating the HP H5Nx viruses from poultry, these activities do not explain the apparent disappearance of these viruses from migratory waterfowl,” the researchers stated in an abstract of their findings.

The scientists believe that more research is needed to fully understand HPAI resistance in wild waterfowl with the goal of improving the industry’s knowledge of the mechanisms that prevent wild birds from perpetuating spread of the virus.