Bird flu strikes
Tennessee chickens again, in a less-dangerous form
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[March 10, 2017] By
Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A commercial flock of
17,000 chickens in Tennessee has been culled after becoming infected
with low-pathogenic bird flu, state agricultural officials said on
Thursday, days after a more dangerous form of the disease killed poultry
in a neighboring county.
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Authorities killed and buried chickens at the site in Giles County,
Tennessee, "as a precaution" after a case of highly pathogenic flu
in Lincoln County led to the deaths of about 73,500 chickens over
the weekend, according to the Tennessee Department of Agriculture.
It said officials did not believe birds at one premise sickened
those at the other.
Highly pathogenic bird flu is often fatal for domesticated poultry
and led to the deaths of about 50 million birds, mostly egg-laying
hens, in the United States in 2014 and 2015. Low-pathogenic flu is
less serious and can cause coughing, depression and other symptoms
in birds.
The highly pathogenic case in Tennessee was the first such infection
in a commercial U.S. operation in more than a year and heightened
fears among chicken producers that the disease may return.
The spread of highly pathogenic flu could represent a financial blow
for poultry operators, such as Tyson Foods Inc and Pilgrim's Pride
Corp, because it would kill more birds or require flocks to be
culled. It also would trigger more import bans from other countries,
after South Korea, Japan and other nations limited imports because
of the case in Lincoln County.
Jack Shere, chief veterinary officer for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, said in an interview that there was speculation the
highly pathogenic virus found in Tennessee shared similar
characteristics with a low-pathogenic virus that circulated in
Tennessee, Kentucky, Minnesota and Illinois in 2009.
Wild migratory birds can carry the flu without showing symptoms and
spread it to poultry through feces, feathers or other contact.
"This virus can mutate very easily, so low-pathogenic issues are
just as important - when they are circulating among the wild birds -
as the high-pathogenic issues," Shere said.
Both cases in Tennessee were located along the state's southern
border with Alabama, one of the country's top producers of "broiler"
chickens for meat. They also were both in facilities for chickens
that bred broiler birds and involved the same strain, H7N9,
according to Tennessee's agriculture department.
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The state said it was testing poultry within a 10-kilometer radius
of the Giles County site for the flu and so far had not found any
other sick flocks.
“When routine testing showed a problem at this facility, the
operators immediately took action and notified our lab," said
Charles Hatcher, Tennessee's state veterinarian.
H7N9 is the same name as a strain of the virus that has killed
people in China, but U.S. authorities said the Tennessee virus was
genetically distinct.
U.S. officials have said the risk of bird flu spreading to people
from poultry or making food unsafe was low.
Low-pathogenic bird flu also was recently detected on a turkey farm
in Wisconsin. Authorities there decided to keep the birds under
quarantine until they tested negative for the virus, rather than to
cull them, according to the state.
(Additional reporting by Mark Weinraub in Washington, D.C.; Editing
by G Crosse, Richard Chang and Bernard Orr)
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