New bird flu wave in France raises fears deadly virus here to stay
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[September 08, 2022]
ROUZIC ISLAND, France (Reuters) -
The island of Rouzic's windswept clifftops should be teeming with
gannets, but an unseasonal wave of bird flu on the French Atlantic coast
this summer has devastated their numbers, alarming conservationists and
poultry farmers.
Thousands of seabirds have perished along France's western shores in
past weeks because of the viral infection, which usually strikes during
autumn and winter months, raising fears it may have become a year-round
risk and endemic to French wildlife.
That poses a danger for France's poultry industry, the European Union's
second largest, which was forced to cull more than 19 million birds
between November and May because of avian influenza, as bird flu is
formally called.
"Bird flu is hitting seabirds in the spring and in the summer, which is
totally new. Traditionally bird flu mainly hits waterfowls during
winter," Pascal Provost, director of the Sept-Iles archipelago bird
reserve which includes the Rouzic island.
After a brief lull in farm outbreaks in May, the French government eased
poultry farming curbs in June.
However, soon after the virus hit flocks along the Brittany coast,
slowly spreading south.
Rouzic is home to one of the world's rare colonies of northern gannets.
Provosts said bird flu ravaged the flock from early July, killing adults
and leaving their chicks to starve.
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A view shows the colony of northern
gannets on the Rouzic island of the Sept-Iles archipelago, a bird
reserve affected by a severe epidemic of bird flu, off the coast of
Perros-Guirec in Brittany, France, September 5, 2022. REUTERS/Stephane
Mahe
Since late July, seven new bird flu
outbreaks have been confirmed on French farms, according to the
agriculture ministry.
"The situation is exceptional - never encountered in France before -
due to its scale and the period when cases are being detected," the
ministry said on its website, warning about the risk of
contamination to poultry farms.
French poultry farmers are still recovering from previous outbreaks
and the mass culling that followed, and before the latest outbreaks
already faced a near 10% fall in output this year, industry group
Anvol said.
"Before, bird flu outbreaks were caused by migrating birds, but now
we see that there are more and more cases in French wildlife. This
is new and it worries farmers and the whole poultry industry", Anvol
chairman Jean-Michel Schaeffer told Reuters.
Bird flu is usually transmitted by infected migrating wild birds'
faeces or direct contact with contaminated feed, clothing and
equipment.
(Reporting by Stephane Mahe and Sybille de La Hamaide; Editing by
Emelia Sithole-Matarise)
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