NOTE: I'll be out of town today (10/28), so there will be no updates of AFD until tonight at the earliest. - MPC
# 2427
A male Northern Pintail duck in Japan.
Photo courtesy of the USGS
The debate over the role of migratory birds in the spread of avian influenza has been a contentious one.
Wildlife enthusiasts tend to cast the blame for the spread of the virus largely on illicit poultry trade and bird smuggling, while the poultry industry often blames migratory birds for bringing the infection to their flocks.
Today we get a study from the USGS, in collaboration with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Alaska and the University of Tokyo, that strongly suggests that migratory birds may play a larger role in intercontinental spread of avian influenza viruses than previously thought.
This from the USGS.
Released: 10/27/2008 11:49:09 AMContact Information:
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
Office of Communication
Wild migratory birds may be more important carriers of avian influenza viruses from continent to continent than previously thought, according to new scientific research that has important implications for highly pathogenic avian influenza virus surveillance in North America.
As part of a multi-pronged research effort to understand the role of migratory birds in the transfer of avian influenza viruses between Asia and North America, scientists with the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in collaboration with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Alaska and the University of Tokyo, have found genetic evidence for the movement of Asian forms of avian influenza to Alaska by northern pintail ducks.
In an article published this week in Molecular Ecology, USGS scientists observed that nearly half of the low pathogenic avian influenza viruses found in wild northern pintail ducks in Alaska contained at least one (of eight) gene segments that were more closely related to Asian than to North American strains of avian influenza.
It was a highly pathogenic form of the H5N1 avian influenza virus that spread across Asia to Europe and Africa over the past decade, causing the deaths of 245 people and raising concerns of a possible human pandemic. The role of migratory birds in moving the highly pathogenic virus to other geographic areas has been a subject of debate among scientists. Disagreement has focused on how likely it is for H5N1 to disperse among continents via wild birds.
"Although some previous research has led to speculation that intercontinental transfer of avian influenza viruses from Asia to North America via wild birds is rare, this study challenges that," said Chris Franson, a research wildlife biologist with the USGS National Wildlife Health Center and co-author of the study. Franson added that most of the previous studies examined bird species that are not transcontinental migrants or were from mid-latitude locales in North America, regions far removed from sources of Asian strains of avian influenza.
A hat tip to Ironorehopper on Flutrackers for posting this link.