
Atlantic Canada experts divided on backyard feeders as bird flu continues to spread
Global News
Bird experts in Atlantic Canada are split on whether putting out backyard bird feeders over the winter is harmless or potentially deadly to birds given the risk of avian flu.
Bird experts in Atlantic Canada are split on whether putting out backyard bird feeders over the winter is harmless or potentially deadly to birds given the risk of avian flu.
Bob Bancroft, the president of Nature Nova Scotia, said in an interview this week that he understands the love many Atlantic Canadians have for birds, but he says in order to protect them from potentially fatal diseases, feeders should not be used.
“I feel strongly that if you’re really thinking about the welfare of the birds, there is a big problem with feeding them in the winter,” Bancroft said, noting that salmonella, trichinosis and avian influenza can spread where birds congregate to eat.
The H5N1 avian flu first appeared in Newfoundland last December, when it was confirmed at a farm in the St. John’s area. Officials said at the time it was the first detection of the virus in Canada since 2015. It has since been found in wild birds and on dozens of poultry farms across the country, although the Canadian Food Inspection Agency currently lists no facilities in Atlantic Canada as infected.
The Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador governments have all issued statements over the past year advising residents to avoid feeding birds. Bancroft said the provinces were right to offer this advice, and that New Brunswickers should avoid feeders as well because the risk of transmission exists across the region.
Elizabeth Walsh, a regional biologist with Nova Scotia’s Department of Natural Resources, said in an interview Thursday that the province continues to advise against the use of bird feeders. Walsh said taking down bird feeders is a way for residents to help Nova Scotia’s efforts in “trying to do everything in our power to prevent further spread” of the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of avian influenza.
In Nova Scotia, there have been more than 3,700 dead or sick birds reported to the province this year, and there have been 23 confirmed cases of H5N1 avian influenza, Walsh said. The biologist said she doesn’t know how many of the sick or dead birds have been tested for avian flu — but she noted that diagnosis take time as it requires a PCR test followed by confirmation testing at a laboratory in Winnipeg.
Walsh said the 23 confirmed avian flu cases in Nova Scotia are mostly in seabirds, but they have also been identified in blue jays, crows and pigeons.