| 
IDNR recommends halt to use of bird feeders, bird 
baths through May 31 until spread of avian influenza subsides
 
		 Send a link to a friend 
            
            [April 26, 2022]  
			  The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) 
			today issued updated public recommendations regarding wild birds and 
			the EA H5N1 strain of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) 
			currently impacting some wild and domestic bird species. | 
        
            | 
			
			 While HPAI has not been detected in songbird 
			species (passerines), IDNR recommends the use of bird feeders and 
			bird baths cease through May 31, or until HPAI infections in the 
			Midwest subside, especially those that waterfowl may visit. During 
			spring, wild birds will have ample food sources while bird feeders 
			are removed. 
 Further IDNR recommendations:
 
 • Clean and rinse bird feeders and baths with a diluted bleach 
			solution (nine parts water to one part bleach) and put away or clean 
			weekly if they can’t be moved away from birds.
 
 • Remove any bird seed at the base of bird feeders to discourage 
			large gatherings of birds or other wildlife.
 
 • Avoid feeding wild birds in close proximity to domestic flocks.
 
 If five or more deceased wild birds are observed in one location, an 
			IDNR district wildlife biologist should be contacted. Contact 
			information for district wildlife biologists can be found at
			
			https://www.
 wildlifeillinois.org/sidebar/contact-
 an-idnr-district-wildlife-biologist/.  USDA Wildlife 
			Services also may be contacted at 1-866-487-3297.
 
			
			 
			In addition, IDNR requests all occurrences of deceased or sick bald 
			eagles be reported to the agency.
 When disposing of any deceased wild birds, rubber gloves and a mask 
			should be worn, and the carcass should be double-bagged in sealed 
			plastic bags. The bags can be buried away from scavengers or placed 
			in the garbage if approved by the local waste service provider. 
			Anyone handling deceased birds should thoroughly wash their hands 
			and any other clothes or tools with soap and water following 
			disposal.
 [to top of second 
            column] | 
            
			 
				 With spring turkey season underway, IDNR 
			notes that wild turkeys are less likely to contract HPAI given their 
			behavior and the habitats they occupy. However, turkey hunters can 
			protect themselves by thoroughly cooking game meat to an internal 
			temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit and implementing other 
			guidance found here at this link:
			
			https://www.aphis.usda.gov/publications/animal_health/2015/fsc_hpai_hunters.pdf.
 
 IDNR first announced HPAI was detected in wild Canada geese in 
			Illinois on March 10, 2022, in a joint notice with the Illinois 
			Department of Agriculture. Since then, wild bird mortality from HPAI 
			has been confirmed in Champaign, Fulton, Sangamon, and Will counties 
			with a more recent mortality event of more than 200 birds in Cook 
			County suspected to be caused from HPAI.
 
 Wild birds impacted include waterfowl and waterbird species, as well 
			as some raptors, including bald eagles. Detections in domestic 
			poultry flocks have also occurred.
 
 For more information on the status of HPAI in wild birds and 
			domestic bird flocks in Illinois and other states, visit
			
			https://www.aphis.usda.gov/aphis/our
 focus/animalhealth/animal-disease-information/avian/avian-influenza/2022-hpai  
			and
			
			https://www2.illinois.gov/sites
 /agr/Animals/AnimalHealth/Pages/
 Highly-Pathogenic-Avian-Influenza.aspx.
 
 [Illinois Office of Communication and 
			Information]
 
			
			 |