H5N1 bird flu has reached every continent. How worried should you be?

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FILE PHOTO: A test tube labelled "Bird Flu", eggs and a piece of paper in the colours of the Australian national flag are seen in this picture illustration, January 14, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

Scientists have become increasingly concerned about H5N1 because the virus is now circulating in an unprecedented range of bird and mammal species. 

 PHOTO: REUTERS

Published Jun 25, 2026, 03:10 PM

Updated Jun 25, 2026, 04:54 PMSet as preferred sourceListen

SYDNEY – A strain of avian influenza known as H5N1 has proved alarmingly adept at jumping continents and species.

First identified in farmed geese in southern China in 1996, the virus has periodically spread from birds to people and other animals.

But the version that has most worried scientists in recent years is clade 2.3.4.4b, an H5N1 strain that has spread globally through wild birds, devastating poultry flocks and infecting more than 50 species of mammals.

Australia had been the last continent without a confirmed H5N1 detection. That changed in June, when the authorities found the virus in a seabird near the town of Esperance in Western Australia.

The discovery is raising alarm about the potential threat to Australia’s native birds and other wildlife, as well as to poultry and cattle farms. 

Scientists around the world are also watching closely for signs the virus is adapting further to mammals, a development that could increase the risk of transmission to and among humans.

For now, the health authorities say the risk to the general public, both in Australia and globally, remains low.

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What is H5N1 bird flu?

H5N1 is a subtype of the influenza A virus.

The strain now drawing global attention belongs to a lineage known as clade 2.3.4.4b, which emerged in Europe around 2020 and has since spread across Africa, Asia, Europe, North and South America, and Antarctica.

Unlike earlier outbreaks that were largely confined to poultry and waterfowl, the current strain – which spreads through bodily fluids such as saliva and faeces – has become established in more than 100 wild bird species, allowing it to spread over thousands of miles through migration.

It has also infected dozens of mammalian species, including foxes, seals, sea lions, cats, dogs and dairy cattle.

How did the virus get to Australia?

Australia had been the only continent free of the H5N1 strain.

That changed when the authorities confirmed the virus in a brown skua, a large predatory seabird, in Western Australia’s Cape Le Grand National Park. 

Because brown skuas breed on sub-Antarctic islands and migrate across the Southern Ocean, scientists believe a migratory bird may have carried the virus thousands of kilometres to Australia.

Within days of the initial detection, the authorities confirmed H5N1 in a Southern Giant Petrel in South Australia, about 1,450km east of the initial case, suggesting that the virus may already be more widely distributed than first thought.

Why are scientists worried?

Scientists have become increasingly concerned about H5N1 because the virus is now circulating in an unprecedented range of bird and mammal species. 

Researchers grew more alarmed in 2024 after H5N1 spread through US dairy cattle, infected dairy workers, and was found at high concentrations in raw milk.

Although most infected workers experienced only mild illness the outbreak showed the virus could become established in a mammalian species previously thought unlikely to play a role in influenza transmission. 

Although there is currently no evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission of H5N1, each new infection gives the virus another opportunity to mutate or reassort with other influenza viruses, increasing the chances that it could eventually acquire the ability to spread efficiently among people.

How dangerous is H5N1 for humans?

Human infections remain uncommon and are usually linked to close contact with infected birds, poultry, dairy cattle or contaminated environments.

Symptoms range from conjunctivitis, or pink eye, and mild respiratory illness to severe pneumonia and respiratory failure.

The severity of illness has varied considerably.

Most infections detected during the recent US dairy outbreak were mild, often involving conjunctivitis.

However, severe and fatal infections continue to be reported elsewhere, particularly following exposure to infected poultry.

Unlike seasonal flu viruses, H5N1 does not readily bind to the predominant receptors in the human upper respiratory tract.

That makes it more difficult for the virus to infect people and helps explain why sustained human-to-human transmission has not occurred.

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Is there a treatment or vaccine?

Antiviral drugs such as oseltamivir, sold as Tamiflu, can be used to treat H5N1 infections in humans. Countries, including Australia, also maintain pandemic influenza preparedness plans that include stockpiles of antiviral drugs and access to H5 vaccines or vaccine candidates that could be deployed if the risk to people increased.

These vaccines are intended for emergency use and are not part of routine immunisation programmes.

Separate vaccines are also used in poultry in some countries to help control outbreaks, although their use varies because vaccinations can make outbreaks harder to detect and complicate international trade.

What is the risk to Australia?

As elsewhere in the world, the immediate concern for Australia is wildlife and agriculture rather than widespread human illness.

Scientists are particularly concerned the virus could threaten Australia’s seabird colonies, fur seals, sea lions and already-endangered species.

Backyard poultry and flocks on commercial farms are also vulnerable.

Elsewhere, H5N1 has caused mass mortality events among seabirds and marine mammals and led to the culling of hundreds of millions of poultry.

These outbreaks have disrupted food supplies, pushed up prices and triggered trade restrictions.

In 2025, for example, a single outbreak at a commercial poultry farm in Brazil – the world’s largest chicken exporter – prompted months-long import bans by major buyers including China and the European Union, threatening more than US$4 billion (S$5.2 billion) in annual export sales and raising concerns about global chicken supplies.

If the virus were to be detected in commercial poultry in Australia, the authorities could impose movement restrictions, quarantine affected properties and cull infected flocks under nationally agreed emergency response plans.

The authorities are urging people not to touch sick or dead birds or marine mammals and to report them through Australia’s Emergency Animal Disease Hotline.

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What happens next?

Scientists are sequencing the virus to determine its origin and how closely it is related to H5N1 strains circulating elsewhere, particularly in the Southern Ocean.

The authorities are expanding surveillance of wild birds and poultry while tracing additional cases to determine whether the virus remains confined to wildlife or has spread more widely.

Australia has spent several years preparing for H5N1’s arrival, investing more than A$113 million (S$101 million) in surveillance, biodiversity protection, laboratory capacity and pandemic preparedness, while establishing a national taskforce involving agriculture, environment, public health and emergency management agencies.

The authorities could also issue housing orders requiring free-range poultry in Western Australia to be kept indoors.

The poultry industry has also tightened its own biosecurity measures.

Ingham’s Group, Australia’s largest poultry producer, has placed its Western Australian farms and processing operations under heightened biosecurity, including a lockdown preventing all non-essential access.

The company said there have been no detections in its operations or supply chain and it continues to supply the Australian market as usual. BLOOMBERG

H5N1 bird flu has reached every continent. How worried should you be? | The Straits Times

Crackdown on snares in Sumatra as elephant, sun bear and tiger rescued

Jaka Hendra BaittriVinolia

25 Jun 2026Asia

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Crackdown on snares in Sumatra as elephant, sun bear and tiger rescued

  • In May and June this year, animal rescuers with Indonesia’s state conservation agency, the BKSDA, rescued a Sumatran tiger, a Sumatran elephant and a sun bear in separate incidents after the animals were caught in snares.
  • Farmers set snares to catch wild boar, which are regarded as a pest to crops, but tiger poachers are also believed to use them to trap critically endangered Sumatran tigers for the illegal wildlife trade.
  • After recent rescues, the conservation agency published a letter stating that authorities consider the snare to be potentially unlawful and telling farmers to remove any existing snares.

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PADANG, Indonesia — Authorities in a stronghold for Sumatran tigers have warned the public against using snares to trap wild boar following the dramatic rescue of an 11-month old female tiger cub last month.

While it is not illegal to set a snare for the purpose of trapping wild boar or animals that are not protected by law, the West Sumatra government said any protected species caught in a snare will now lead to criminal liability.

The new clarification was set out in a letter issued in late May by the West Sumatra province office of Indonesia’s conservation agency, the BKSDA. It cites a 2024 amendment to Indonesia’s 1990 conservation law governing the protection of wildlife.

“The situation has become dangerous because people are setting these snares,” explained Rizaldi, a conservation scientist at Andalas University in Padang, the capital of West Sumatra province.

The evacuation of a Sumatran tiger trapped in a wild boar snare in Pasaman.
The evacuation of a Sumatran tiger trapped in a wild boar snare in Pasaman. Image courtesy of BKSDA West Sumatra.

Renewed attention on snares

The recent crackdown on snares was sparked after a Sumatran tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae) was discovered in a wild boar snare in Padang Mantiggi Utara village located in West Sumatra’s Pasaman district.

Officials from the West Sumatra BKSDA, the conservation agency, arrived at the scene at around 13:30 on May 21, where they found a young female tiger in distress and pain. A snare was wrapped around the animal’s neck, trunk and right foreleg, in about five loops.

“She struggled for a while and began groaning back and forth,” said Edi Susilo, the BKSDA lead in Pasaman district.

The animal was sedated and evacuated to a center operated by the conservation agency.

“For those [snares] already installed, take them down straight away because they pose risks to protected tigers and sun bears and others,” the BKSDA’s Ade Putra said.

Since the letter was issued in late May, rescuers have freed a female sun bear (Helarctos malayanus) in West Sumatra and an elephant calf (Elephas maximus sumatranus) in neighboring Jambi province, which were both found injured in snares in mid-June.

BKDSA’s Susilo said a team from the agency, the Centre for Orangutan Protection and veterinarians from the Pasaman district agriculture department sedated and evacuated the injured sun bear for treatment on June 19 after receiving a report from the community in Panti, an area of Pasaman district.

In the neighboring Sumatran province of Jambi, rescuers freed a young elephant cub caught in a snare — reportedly for as long as two weeks — on land used to produce palm oil operated by PT Lestari Asri Jaya (LAJ), a subsidiary of France’s Michelin.

A team from the West Sumatra Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA Sumbar) rescued a tiger caught in a snare in North Rao district, Pasaman regency, May 21, 2026.
A team from the West Sumatra Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA Sumbar) rescued a tiger caught in a snare in North Rao district, Pasaman regency, May 21, 2026. The tiger is currently being held at a wildlife transit facility. Image courtesy of BKSDA Sumbar.

To the rescue

The West Sumatra province office of Indonesia’s state conservation agency has recorded four tigers caught in snares in the last four years, two of which died as a result of their injuries.

Researchers from Indonesia and the Memphis Zoological Society reported in a 2023 study on tiger snaring in Aceh and North Sumatra, two provinces that together contain a large share of Sumatra’s remaining tiger habitat.

From 2008-2023, the researchers documented 28 confirmed incidents of tigers caught in snares. Nine of these tigers died, while eight others suffered injuries requiring permanent captivity.

Sumatran tigers with disabling injuries are often not released back into the wild as physical impairment can leave them unable to hunt their usual prey. If released, they may resort to fast food sources such as livestock near local settlements, elevating the risk of conflict with humans.

The 28 confirmed cases of tigers caught in snares is a minimum figure only in the two provinces studied, as it does not include tigers successfully trapped by poachers, or cases where the tiger was caught inadvertently and not reported.

The condition of the Rawa Singkil Wildlife Reserve, Aceh, which continues to be encroached upon.
The condition of the Rawa Singkil Wildlife Reserve, Aceh, which continues to be encroached upon. Image by Junaidi Hanafiah/Mongabay Indonesia.

Snare tactics

Efforts by conservation authorities to restrict the use of snares are complicated by challenging topography and hard-to-reach communities in the Barisan mountain range, home to much of Sumatra’s remaining tiger habitat.

In at least one tiger habitat accessible only by boat, residents living inside a protected forest have previously clashed with conservation officials.

Snares remain the easiest tool for farmers to trap wild boar, which can trample and uproot crops, potentially ruining an entire harvest.

“Snares can be made from any material, they’re easy to make, and are inexpensive compared to homemade weapons or traps,” said Dwi Nugroho Adhiasto, an advisor with the Science for Endangered and Trafficked Species Foundation (SCENTS). “They can also can be installed en masse using a range of methods.”

But that simplicity makes snares a serious threat to tigers and other wildlife across Sumatra and the wider Southeast Asia region because they are indiscriminate, said ecologist Sunarto.

“It’s no surprise that these various studies have shown snares are one of the causes of extinction or drastic declines in wildlife populations, particularly in Southeast Asia,” Sunarto said.

Tiger conservationist Erlinda C. Kartika said human-tiger interactions in West Sumatra has also been driven by habitat loss, dwindling prey and landslides that may have disrupted tiger movement.

The IUCN, the global wildlife authority, estimates fewer than 600 Sumatran tigers remain in the wild, underscoring how snares pose a critical threat to the survival of the world’s rarest tiger subspecies.

“Together with law enforcement officers we will conduct patrols and enforcement operations, confiscate illegal snares, and enforce the law against perpetrators,” said the BKSDA’s Ade.

Banner image: A Sumatran tiger, estimated to be 11 months old, was caught in a snare in Rao Utara district, Pasaman Regency, May 21, 2026. Image courtesy of BKSDA West Sumatra.

This story was first published here and here in Indonesian on May 24 and June 8, 2026.https://news.mongabay.com/2026/06/indonesia-driver-sentenced-over-organized-crime-group-trafficking-live-orangutan/embed/#?secret=lsG9kdQEqP#?secret=pjpt6nzX1p https://news.mongabay.com/2026/04/investigators-eye-organized-crime-links-in-3-ton-pangolin-scale-haul-at-jakarta-port/embed/#?secret=vgTefCnxME#?secret=scJVr5Bfv6

Citation:

Figel, J.J., Safriansyah, R., Baabud, S.F. & Herman, Z. (2023). Snaring in a stronghold: Poaching and bycatch of critically endangered tigers in northern Sumatra, Indonesia. Biological Conservation, 286, 110274. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2023.110274