Rotorua Daily Post

Avian flu alert for NZ egg farmers

Strict surveillan­ce and biosecurit­y measures urged

- Monique Steele of RNZ

New Zealand’s egg and chicken farmers are being urged to be vigilant and keep up strict biosecurit­y and surveillan­ce measures in case avian influenza arrives in New Zealand.

Bird flu, the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus, was top of the agenda at the Internatio­nal Poultry Council’s annual meeting in Argentina last week.

The virus has been circulatin­g again, most recently in the United States, where it has been discovered in dairy cow herds and infected a dairy worker.

Michael Brooks, executive director of both the Poultry Industry Associatio­n of New Zealand and the Egg Producers’ Federation New Zealand, was in Buenos Aires for the event.

He said the fact avian flu had not been found in Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Islands made the region quite unique, but the risk was still there.

“We’ve looked at the migratory birds coming from the Northern Hemisphere and we’ve never found it in those birds,” he said.

He said the discovery of the virus in birds in Antarctica in October last year heightened the risk.

“It’s now in Antarctica, and so potentiall­y birds may contract it from Antarctica and come up to New Zealand through the sub-antarctic Islands. Maybe not migratory patterns, birds blown off course or something. That’s a new risk that we just hadn’t expected.”

There were also fears about the impact its circulatio­n could have on New Zealand’s native wildlife.

Brooks said the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) had been carrying out surveillan­ce of wild birds for decades, and was ramping it up even more now.

He said the industry was working very closely with MPI as the virus would have a serious impact on the commercial poultry sector if found here.

“We do not want it to be getting onto commercial farms. It really becomes a complex situation. So the number one thing is do what we can in terms of biosecurit­y.

“The risk is going to be incredibly increased and every possible step that we can take around biosecurit­y, ensuring little or no interactio­n with wild birds, protection of feed — all those sorts of things are important.”

Brooks said farmers should keep their tracing and biosecurit­y plans up to date, and keep wild birds off their property as much as possible.

Avian flu has caused the death of hundreds of millions of wild and commercial birds across Africa, Europe and Asia since it was first discovered in China in the mid-1990s.

 ?? Photo / 123RF ?? Avian flu was first discovered in China in the mid-1990s and has caused the death of hundreds of millions of birds.
Photo / 123RF Avian flu was first discovered in China in the mid-1990s and has caused the death of hundreds of millions of birds.

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