Sunday, August 26, 2007

Bavarian Farm Positive for High Path H5N1

 

# 1091

 

Although sporadic, the number of outbreaks in Europe this summer have been enough to remind us that the virus hasn't gone away and that despite our modern bio-security, poultry farms are susceptible.

 

 

 

 

 

H5N1 bird flu at German farm

 

BERLIN - Tests have found that birds at a poultry farm in southern Germany died of the H5N1 strain of bird flu, and some 160,000 birds were being slaughtered as a precaution, authorities said.

 

The virus was detected in ducklings at the farm near Erlangen, in northern Bavaria. A federal lab confirmed that the birds died of the "highly pathogenic" H5N1 variant, the state consumer protection ministry said Saturday.

 

More than 400 birds had died over a short period of time at the farm, ministry spokeswoman Sandra Brandt said. Authorities planned to start Saturday evening with the slaughter of the 160,000 birds at the farm.

 

Several cases of the virus have surfaced among wild birds in Germany this year. Last month, it was detected in a domestic goose in the east of the country.