France tightens bird flu measures in southwest after new outbreaks
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[May 13, 2023]
PARIS (Reuters) - France has reinforced sanitary measures to curb
a wave of bird flu cases on duck farms in the southwest, where it has
broken a recent lull in outbreaks, the French agriculture ministry said
on Friday.
France has been among the countries worst affected by the unprecedented
spread of avian influenza - commonly called bird flu - around the world
in the past year.
The disease has killed hundreds of millions of birds, disrupting supply
of poultry meat and eggs while prompting some countries including France
to plan vaccination campaigns for farm flocks.
Since May 4, 21 outbreaks of highly pathogenic bird flu have been
detected in southwestern France, mostly among ducks, the agriculture
ministry said in a statement.
Until the past week, France had recorded no outbreaks since March 14,
leading the authorities to lower its nationwide alert level from high to
moderate, the ministry said.
In the southwest, flocks in the immediate vicinity of affected farms
will be culled to reduce propagation risks, while enlarged sanitary
buffer zones of up to 20 km (12.43 miles) have also been introduced
around outbreak locations, it said.
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Mulard ducks are pictured at a poultry
farm in Montsoue, France, January 12, 2017, as France continues a
massive cull of ducks in three regions most affected by a severe
outbreak of bird flu as it tries to contain the virus which has been
spreading quickly over the past month. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau/File
Photo
The southwest has a large duck
breeding sector for producing foie gras pate. The region was badly
hit by past bird flu waves but the ministry said it was less
affected this winter after steps to reduce the concentration of the
duck population.
The latest cases underscored the relevance of vaccinating flocks,
the ministry said. France last month launched a tender to secure 80
million doses to be ready to start a vaccination program in the
autumn.
(Reporting by Gus Trompiz;editing by Diane Craft)
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