The Star Malaysia

Ecuador to protect unique Galapagos birds from H5N1

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Quito: Ecuador has put in place a plan to try and protect its unique wild bird species on the Galapagos islands from the H5N1 virus also rampaging through Europe and North America.

The bird flu virus reached South America via migratory wild birds in recent weeks, impacting mainly Peru, where thousands of pelicans and other seabirds have died, and Ecuador, which has ordered the culling of 180,000 farm birds.

The director of the Galapagos National Park, Danny Rueda, said in a statement that “permanent monitoring has been arranged in areas with the most seabirds,” including all tourism hotspots.

The Galapagos is a bird-watchers paradise for the scores of unique and colourful birds found on the archipelag­o, such as the blue-footed booby with its quirky mating rituals, and endemic penguin, cormorant and albatross species.

On Wednesday, Ecuador declared a 90-day animal health emergency after detecting the highly contagious bird flu on some farms, and ordered the slaughter of about 180,000 poultry at affected sites.

In Peru, authoritie­s have culled at least 37,000 chickens to try and control an outbreak, which has killed more than 14,000 seabirds, mostly pelicans.

 ?? — AFP ?? At risk: a brown pelican at the Galapagos Islands, where ecuador plans to protect its unique species.
— AFP At risk: a brown pelican at the Galapagos Islands, where ecuador plans to protect its unique species.

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