The Citizen (KZN)

Resorts keeping a lookout for H5N8

MONITORING WILD BIRDS IN AVIARIES Montecasin­o aviary closed and Sun Internatio­nal stepping up oversight.

- News@citizen.co.za

Sun Internatio­nal has placed its aviary facilities, situated at Sun City in the North West, and Meropa Casino in Limpopo, on high alert following the ruinous and highly pathogenic outbreak of bird flu currently infecting the poultry industry and more recently wild birds.

Tsogo Sun announced last week it was closing its Montecasin­o aviary after Johannesbu­rg City Parks and Zoo (JPCZ) confirmed an outbreak at its facilities, with 581 carcasses being incinerate­d and 243 chicks and 110 deserted eggs found.

Sun Internatio­nal’s health and safety coordinato­r, Sheena O’Brien, said Sun City and Meropa had not been declared as areas of concern, but they had been placed on alert.

“Meropa and Sun City, to date, have not noticed a variance in bird deaths in the area, nor are they treating more birds than usual. Our properties will implement internal precaution­ary processes ,” she said.

O’Brien added that blue cranes, South Africa’s national bird and an endangered species, roam freely between the golf course and the hotel gardens.

“As a precaution­ary measure, we will temporaril­y close the bird aviary and continue to monitor our birds to ensure their protection. The protected species will also continue to be monitored.”

Meropa Casino has a variety of bird species in aviaries. “Their birds are monitored daily and if an animal is found to be ill, the local vet is brought in. An enclosed aviary facility is available where birds can be safely relocated should an outbreak of this nature occur in the area.”

Regarding food safety, steps have been implemente­d to ensure poultry is procured from safe and reliable sources, she added.

Nearly four million egg-laying chickens at farms in Gauteng, Mpumalanga, North West, KwaZulu-Natal, the Eastern Cape, Western Cape and Free State are in the process of being culled, or have already been, costing the industry a whopping R800 million.

JPCZ said the seasonal migration of free-roaming birds had spread the virus to its parks. “This is evident in various parts of the country, including in the City of Joburg, around the Westdene Dam, Emmarentia Dam, Zoo Lake and the Joburg Zoo,” it said.

According to Bird Life SA, the white-winged flufftail species is at most risk of becoming extinct due to the outbreak of the H5N8 strain of bird flu. With only 250 whitewinge­d flufftail birds left globally, 50 of these in SA, Birdlife SA said there is a “real risk” if the species is infected with the virus.

Wetland birds, like the flufftail, were most at risk because the virus spreads easily in aquatic environmen­ts, hence Joburg water spots were affected, it said. The whitewinge­d flufftail is an endemic resident of Africa and is only known to occur in the high-altitude wetlands of SA and Ethiopia.

According to the SA Poultry Associatio­n, bird flu entered the country via wild ducks migrating from Europe to the Western Cape.

The World Health Organisati­on said the H5N8 strain of bird flu did not affect human health. –

 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? A supporter of the opposition National Super Alliance wears oranges during a protest in Nairobi, Kenya, calling for the sacking of election board officials involved in August’s cancelled presidenti­al vote.
Picture: Reuters A supporter of the opposition National Super Alliance wears oranges during a protest in Nairobi, Kenya, calling for the sacking of election board officials involved in August’s cancelled presidenti­al vote.

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