U.S. detects highly lethal bird flu in Tyson Foods
chickens
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[February 15, 2022]
By Tom Polansek
CHICAGO (Reuters) -A flock of about 240,000
chickens owned by Tyson Foods Inc in Kentucky tested positive for a
highly lethal form of bird flu, government officials and the company
said on Monday, widening an outbreak that threatens the U.S. poultry
industry.
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Infections in the chickens being raised for meat triggered more
restrictions on U.S. exports, with China blocking poultry products
from Kentucky. Last week, buyers like China and Korea limited
poultry purchases from Indiana due to an outbreak at a commercial
turkey farm there.
The broiler chickens in Fulton County, Kentucky, located near the
border with Tennessee, were infected with the same H5N1 strain of
highly pathogenic avian flu as the turkeys in Indiana, Kentucky
officials said.
They said it is Kentucky's first outbreak of the highly lethal bird
flu, which killed more than 50 million U.S. chickens and turkeys in
2015.
Birds from the infected flock will be culled and will not enter the
food system, state officials said.
Tyson Foods is working with government authorities to prevent the
disease from spreading and is heightening safety measures at other
local farms, spokesman Gary Mickelson said.
The outbreak is not expected to lower overall chicken production
levels because thousands of farms raise chickens for Tyson, he said.
Mickelson added that Tyson Foods' chicken products are safe to eat.
On Tuesday, Kentucky officials expect final test results for a
separate suspected outbreak among turkeys in Webster County,
Kentucky.
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The disease was also detected in a backyard
flock of birds in Fauquier County, Virginia,
that have already been culled, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture said. The cases do not
present an immediate public health concern, the
agency said. Wild birds are
thought to be spreading the virus, after dozens tested positive
along the U.S. East Coast.
The United States is the world's largest producer and second-largest
exporter of poultry meat, according to the U.S. government. Kentucky
said it is the seventh biggest chicken-meat producing state. Almost
18% of U.S. poultry production is exported, and the industry is a
major user of feed grains.
The disease is hitting the market as poultry supplies are down due
to strong demand and labor shortages at meat plants during to the
COVID-19 pandemic. Government data showed U.S. frozen chicken
supplies were down 14% from a year ago at the end of December while
turkey inventories were down 23%.
(Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by David Gregorio and Stephen
Coates)
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