Suspect low-risk bird flu
case found in big German poultry area
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[November 23, 2016]
HAMBURG (Reuters) - German officials
are preparing to cull around 16,000 turkeys after a first suspected
farm-based case of low-risk H5 bird flu was discovered in Lower Saxony,
one of Europe's biggest poultry-producing regions, authorities said on
Wednesday.
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Tests will now be carried out to establish whether the more
threatening H5N8 strain is present, said the state agriculture
ministry in Lower Saxony, whose farms have more than 35 million
chickens, turkeys, ducks and geese.
Israel and a series of European countries have found cases of H5N8
bird flu in the past few weeks and some have ordered that poultry
flocks be kept indoors to stop the disease spreading.
The contagious H5N8 strain has been repeatedly found in wild birds
in much of Germany over recent weeks, and the government has
tightened sanitary rules for farms and warned it may order poultry
to be kept inside.
Most outbreaks have involved wild birds but Germany, Hungary and
Austria also reported cases in domestic duck and turkey farms where
all poultry had to be culled. A case was also reported on a farm in
Denmark on Monday.
More outbreaks of a severe strain of bird flu in Europe are likely
to occur in the next few weeks as wild birds believed to transmit
the virus migrate southward, the deputy head of the world animal
health body said.
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Bird flu cannot be transmitted through food but trade restrictions
can have a major impact on countries where the disease is present.
Infection from wild birds is suspected to be the source of the
current bird flu outbreak. The upcoming Christmas season is a
critical time of sales for poultry farmers throughout Europe.
(Reporting by Michael Hogan and Hans-Edzard Busemann, editing by
Mark Trevelyan)
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