Australia, New Zealand brace for looming bird flu threat
The Hindu
Australia and New Zealand prepare for arrival of destructive bird flu strain, tightening biosecurity, vaccinating species, and war-gaming response plans.
Australia and New Zealand are bracing for the arrival of a destructive bird flu strain by tightening biosecurity at farms, testing shore birds for disease, vaccinating vulnerable species and war-gaming response plans.
Oceania is the last region of the world free of the H5N1 clade 2.3.4.4b avian influenza that has killed hundreds of millions of birds and tens of thousands of mammals since appearing in Asia, Europe and Africa in 2020, littering beaches with corpses and upending the agricultural industry.
While the region is somewhat protected by its geography - it is off the migration routes of big birds such as geese that spread infection - the virus is close, having reached Indonesia in 2022 and Antarctica last year.
Scientists and officials say there is a higher risk, particularly in Australia, of it arriving with smaller migratory shore birds during the Southern Hemisphere springtime months from September to November.
“It is clearly a threat to our country’s ecosystems,” said Fiona Fraser, Threatened Species Commissioner at Australia’s environment ministry.
“Many of our species are found nowhere else in the world,” she said. “Vulnerable species may face long-term population setbacks and heightened risk of extinction.”
Officials fear mass deaths from the avian flu and even the near-extinctions of species including endangered sea lions, black swans and many types of seabird, and the loss of millions of farmed poultry.