Domestic Poultry
Domestic poultry have been the biggest casualties of the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus. Find out what measures are being taken to control the spread of avian flu through the poultry industry.
Poultry
have low resistance to the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus which can spread rapidly through
flocks. The mortality rate for poultry can be 90-100 percent, often
within 48 hours. The virus has the greatest opportunity to mutate into
more harmful forms in the crowded environment of factory farms where
huge flocks are housed together and where there is close contact with
their human caretakers. Exportation of poultry and hatching eggs can
spread the disease to the commercial poultry industry in other
countries and to small farms.
To reduce that risk, the U.S. has
banned the importation of poultry from countries where the avian flu
virus has been found. The federal government has also stepped-up
monitoring of the poultry trade which includes commerce in manure,
feathers, eggs, and billions of birds every year. Smuggling of these
poultry and poultry products is considered by many to be the primary
way avian flu is likely to be spread into other countries.
The
links provided below offer additional information about the impact of
avian flu on the poultry industry worldwide and the precautions being
taken to protect commercial flocks and other domestic poultry in the
United States.
- Information for those who own poultry on how to prevent
outbreaks of avian flu in their flocks; how to report sick or dead farm
birds, U.S. Department of Agriculture.
- Avian flu information for owners of small flocks of poultry, University of Maine Cooperative Extension.
- Report from GRAIN says wild birds and small farms are being unfairly blamed for the spread of avian flu. GRAIN is an international non-governmental organization based in Spain.
Article: U.S. poultry farms defend against bird flu
Washington Post (AP), April 22, 2006
- U.S. poultry experts using Google to prepare for bird flu, Reuters, May 30, 2006.
Please visit our Q & A section for answers to other questions about avian flu.
- When and how is avian flu predicted to arrive in the U.S. and Canada?
- What will happen if the highly pathogenic virus is detected in the United States?
- How are birds affected by avian influenza?