Bird Flu Cancels Poultry Exhibit At Deschutes Co. Fair

Posted Yesterday At 8:47am by Heather Roberts

https://kbnd.com/kbnd-news/local-news-feed/644579

BEND, OR — Oregon’s ninth case of bird flu was found this week in Deschutes County. The flock of 40 ducks and chickens is north of the previous incidents, pushing the Dept. of Agriculture’s quarantine area to include southern Redmond and the fairgrounds. “The Deschutes County Fair will not have poultry at the fair this year,” State Veterinarian Dr. Ryan Scholz tells KBND News. The fair begins August third, which is within the two-week qurantine surveillance window. 

He says the risk is not from the domestic birds, but from attendees who might expose prized poultry and then infect their entire flock, “The risk of a fair goer having just been out at the county park, wandering the pathway, walking through some goose poop that happens to be infected with influenza, not washing their hands or doing something like that, and coming to the fair and wandering down the chicken aisle and potentially exposing those birds to virus is going to be a risk.”

Deschutes County isn’t the only one dealing with Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI), “There are other fairs that are kind of modifying what they’re doing with poultry based on the risk. There’s still a risk of this disease anywhere,” says Dr. Scholz, “Lane County [fair], which is going on right now, they opted to do just a one-day come in, show the birds, go home. Rather than have the birds there for the whole fair.” He says ODA is working with Deschutes County’s 4-H to allow a similar market bird sale, “So, the birds that kids have been raising that were planned to be sold at the fair in the auction – so that those kids can still do that – Because those birds are processed immediately after sale. They’re going to do just a really short one-day, bring them in, show them, sell them and then process them right away. But otherwise, the rest of the birds will not be at fair this year.”

Central Oregon seems particularly susceptible to the spread of bird flu. Dr. Scholz believes it might be because of the number of private ponds, “It’s primarily people who have domestic waterfowl and other poultry species and have a pond where wild ducks and geese are coming to that pond, co-mingling with their domestic ducks and then, that’s how these infections are starting.” He says the virus will continue to spread as long as wild and domestic birds are allowed to co-mingle. 

This latest case impacts the quarantine area because, like the other local cases, eggs from this flock were sold to the public. But, because the property is north of the previous locations, the quarantine radius expands north. In this latest case, all 40 chickens and ducks were euthanized.

ODA provides an online map of the quarantined sites in Oregon. People may also enter their address using the online tool to determine whether their property is included in the quarantine area. The purpose of the quarantine is to prevent the movement of poultry and poultry products from within the affected area giving state and federal officials time to conduct surveillance to ensure no additional cases of HPAI exist. The quarantine also applies to importing all birds from states where a state or federal quarantine is in place.

For more tips on protecting your backyard flock, please visit the ODA online at Avian Influenza.

Another Oregon backyard poultry farm infected with bird flu

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So far, agriculture officials have killed more than 980 birds

BY: LYNNE TERRY – JULY 22, 2022 4:31 PM

State officials have euthanized four backyard flocks infected with bird flu. (Lynne Terry/Oregon Capital Chronicle)

Another backyard poultry farm in Deschutes County has lost its flock to bird flu

Report an outbreak:

Call 503-986-4711 or 800-347-7028.

Report a sick or dead wild bird:

Contact the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife at 866-968-2600 orWildlife.Health@odfw.oregon.gov.

Protect your flock:

The state recommends that owners of backyard birds:

  • Restrict access to your property and keep your birds away from other birds.
  • Keep a designated pair of shoes to wear around your birds, wash clothing after visiting your birds and use disinfectants correctly.
  • Clean and disinfect cages, poultry equipment and car tires after visiting a farm store, poultry swap or other location with birds present.
  • Keep new birds separate from your flock for 30…

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Bird flu confirmed in seabirds found dead on Isle of Man coast

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Black guillemot sitting on a boat in Peel
Image caption,The majority of the birds found dead were guillemots

More than 50 dead seabirds found washed up on beaches on the west coast of the Isle of Man this week had bird flu, the government has confirmed.

Samples taken from the birds, which were mainly guillemots, confirmed they had died from the highly contagious H5N1 strain of avian influenza.

It is the same strain confirmed in recentoutbreaks in seabird colonies in Scotland.

The birds were found at Fleshwick, Spaldrick, Niarbyl, and Kirk Michael.

There have also been reports of dead seabirds at Port Erin and near the Calf of Man on the south of the island.

Niarbyl beach
Image caption,Some of the dead birds were found at Niarbyl on the west of the island

The latest development follows an outbreak of bird flu in seabird colonies at Bass Rock in Scotland, with dead birds…

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“The Scale Is Hard to Grasp”: The Avian Flu Is a Catastrophe for Seabirds

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The bird’s nest is a key factor in how quickly the virus is transmitted.

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This story was originally published by theGuardianandis reproduced here as part of theClimate Deskcollaboration.

A quarter of Europe’sbreeding seabirds spend spring in the UK, turning our coastline into a giant maternity unit. These noisy outcrops usually stink of bird poo. However, this year has been different. “Instead of the smell of guano, it’s the smell of death,” says Gwen Potter, a National Trust countryside manager working on the Farne Islands, off the coast ofNorthumberland. “It’s completely horrendous.”

This annual congregation of life has turned into a super-spreader event, as a highly pathogenic avian influenza, H5N1—also known as bird flu—sweeps through populations of breeding birds, causing devastating…

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Bird flu found in dead seabirds

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Friday, July 22nd, 2022 6:24pm

https://www.manxradio.com/news/isle-of-man-news/bird-flu-found-in-dead-seabirds/

Government says risk to public low

Bird flu has been detected in dead seabirds which were found on beaches on the Isle of Man.

They tested positive for the same strain of Avian Influenza which caused a recent outbreak in Scotland.

Government says the risk to the general public is low, but people are being asked to not touch, and keep dogs away from, sick or dead birds.

Fishermen, leisure swimmers, kayakers and other water users are being asked to keep a respectful distance from all wild birds where possible.

Bird keepers are also urged to practice good biosecurity and try to keep their birds away from wild birds.

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Bird flu: People to avoid 23 small Scottish islands

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from BBC.com

Dead gannet in Shetland
Image caption,Gannets have been found dead in Shetland

People should stop visiting more than 20 small Scottish islands in a bid to limit the spread of bird flu, it has been announced.

The outbreak has seen large numbers of dead and dying seabirds being found.

Nature body NatureScot has now advised 23 islands across Scotland to stop public landings until chicks have fledged.

They are small islands in Orkney, Shetland, the Firth of Forth, Argyll, the Western Isles, and Highlands.

Visitors can still take boat trips to seabird colonies without coming ashore.

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Birds in Shetland
Image caption,Hundreds of birds are dying in colonies

The islands affected

Until the end of August for breeding puffins, Arctic skuas and Arctic terns:

  • Orkney – Calf of Eday, Swona and Muckle Skerry
  • Firth of Forth – Craigleith, Inchmickery, Isle of May

Until mid-September for breeding great skuas, common terns…

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Beavers to be given legal protection in England

‘Nature’s engineers’ who create wetlands with their dams are recognised as native wildlife

Beaver
Legislation will make it an offence to capture, kill, disturb, or injure beavers, or damage their breeding sites or resting places. Photograph: Jeppe Gustafsson/REX/Shutterstock

Helena Horton Environment reporterThu 21 Jul 2022 09.03 EDT

Beavers are to be given legal protection in England, meaning it will be illegal to kill or harm them as they are formally recognised as native wildlife.

This is a step forward for the charismatic rodents, which were hunted to extinction in the country 400 years ago but have reappeared owing to illegal releases around the country.

The government has also been licensing beaver releases inside enclosures, and some environmentalists hope that later this year in the upcoming beaver strategy there will be permissions for the rodents to be released to roam wild.

It is thought there are hundreds of beavers already living wild along England’s waterways, with some experts believing there could be as many as 800.

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New legislation, due to come into force on 1 October, will make it an offence to deliberately capture, kill, disturb, or injure beavers, or damage their breeding sites or resting places – without holding the appropriate licence.

The animals are known as “nature’s engineers” as they create wetlands – an important habitat for many plants and animals – when they build dams. In doing so, they also prevent flooding and drought-related problems such as wildfires by keeping water in the land.

Illustration by Valero Doval

Derek Gow, a farmer turned rewilder who is known as one of the country’s leading beaver experts, said: “The news today that beavers will be afforded legal protection in England is both appropriate and welcome.

“We have been very slow to recognise the critical role that this species delivers in the creation of complex wetland landscapes, which can afford resilience against the twin extremes of flood and drought. All they need from us to guarantee this goal is understanding, tolerance and space.”

There was confusion this week as the plans were due to be announced earlier, but appeared to have been pulled at the last minute.

Craig Bennett, chief executive of the Wildlife Trusts, said at the time: “Clarity around legal protections for beavers are crucial if populations are to recover and thrive long term – it is extremely disappointing that this legislation has been brought to a juddering halt, with no explanation why.

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“We need to see the widespread return of wild beavers to create vital wetland habitats and restore rivers, many of which have been damaged by centuries of dredging and being cut off from floodplains. As England grapples with a nature and climate emergency, we need our beavers back.”

However, sources at Defra blamed the rush to get legislation out before recess for the hold-up, and said they always planned to enshrine these protections in law, as it is a legal requirement under the Berne convention.

Here’s How China Might Respond to a Taiwan Visit by Nancy Pelosi

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Bloomberg News-Yesterday 4:50 PM

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(Bloomberg) — From frothy rhetoric to fighter jet incursions, China rarely leaves even a low-level exchange between the US and Taiwan unanswered. The question now is how far Beijing will go to signal its displeasure with any Taipei visit by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

©BloombergUS House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat from California, during an event ahead of the passage of H.R. 8373, the Right to Contraception Act, at the US Capitol in Washington, D.C., US, on Wednesday, July 20, 2022. The Right to Contraception Act enshrines into law the right to access and use FDA-approved contraceptives.

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Pacific Northwest braces for ‘hazardous heat’

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Sharon Udasin-Yesterday 12:10 PM

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The Pacific Northwest is facing a particularly grim outlook when it comes to brutal summer heat, federal weather experts said on Thursday.

©Provided by The HillPacific Northwest braces for ‘hazardous heat’

Over the next two weeks, meteorologists are “favoring above normal temperatures at pretty high odds for much of the western part of the lower 48, with the highest odds across the Pacific Northwest region or the Rockies,” according to Jon Gottschalck, chief of operational predictions at the National Weather Service’s Climate Prediction Center.

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The situation is expected to become especially dire for the Pacific Northwest, including the cities of Portland and Seattle, which could experience “hazardous heat,” Gottschalck warned. He spoke at a U.S. Drought and Heat Webinar hosted by the National Integrated Drought…

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