Bird Flu home page
Avian Flu home page


Avian influenza
(aka bird flu, avian flu) is caused by a type of influenza virus that is hosted by birds, but may infect several species of mammals. It was first identified in Italy in the early 1900s and is now known to exist worldwide. A strain of the H5N1-type of avian influenza virus that emerged in 1997 has been identified as the most likely source of a future influenza pandemic.
Strains of avian influenza virus may infect various types of animals, including birds, pigs, horses, seals, whales and humans. However, wild fowl act as natural asymptomatic carriers, spreading it to more susceptible domestic stocks. Avian influenza virus spreads in the air and in manure and there is no evidence that the virus can survive in well cooked meat.


Diagnosis
How to Recognise Avian Influenza
What to look for
  • Ruffled feathers
  • Soft-shelled eggs
  • Depression and droopiness
  • Sudden drop in egg production
  • Loss of appetite
  • Cyanosis (purplish-blue coloring) of wattles and comb
  • Edema and swelling of head, eyelids, comb, wattles, and hocks
  • Green diarrhoea
  • Blood-tinged discharge from nostrils
  • Incoordination, including loss of ability to walk and stand
  • Pin-point hemorrhages (most easily seen on the feet and shanks)
  • Respiratory distress
  • Increased death losses in a flock
  • Sudden death
  • Nasal discharges
For more detail in avian influenza in poultry click here


Poultry Vaccination as a strategy for controlling AI in commercial birds
Outbreaks of avian influenza in the poultry industry cause devastating economic losses and is generally controlled through extensive culling of infected birds. Alternative strategies also use vaccination as a supplementary control measure during avian influenza outbreaks.
Advantages of Vaccination
  • Vaccination reduces susceptibility to infection.
  • A higher dose of virus is necessary to infect the vaccinated birds.
  • Vaccinated birds shed less virus.
    - Decreased contamination of the environment.
    - Decreased risk of human infection
  • Used strategically vaccination compliments a stamping out strategy by slowing/stopping the spread of the virus
For more information on poultry vaccination see:


Biosecurity
Avian Influenza (Fowl Plague) is a potentially devastating disease, predominantly of chickens and turkeys, although the virus can also affect game birds (pheasants, partridge and quail), ratites (ostrich and emu), psittacine and passerine birds.
Avian Influenza is caused by an orthomyxovirus, or influenza virus and can survive for considerable lengths of time outside of the host and birds are infected through contact with other birds, mechanical vectors such as vehicles and equipment and personnel travelling between farms, markets and abattoirs.
Precautionary requirements include cleaning and disinfection of premises and the establishment of a Biosecurity barrier to help prevent spread of disease is essential.
For more information on biosecurity see the links below
Avian and Bird Flu News
Avian Flu News
Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Latest Avian / Bird Flu News

Catch up with the latest bird flu news from across the globe with our daily bird flu updates...
Sign up for our weekly newsletter...
Bookmark this page and keep up-to-date with ease...
TIP - Click the flags for that Country's News Only

Thursday, March 19, 2009
European Union - Bird Flu News FierceBiotech
Officials Spooked by Bird Flu Mix-up
EU - Public health officials in Europe are taking steps to make sure there's no repeat of a recent incident in which the lethal H5N1 virus was accidentally combined with a seasonal flu virus and shipped to labs in Europe.
Friday, December 19, 2008
European Union - Bird Flu News Chicago Tribune
European Agency Endorses Baxter's Bird Flu Vaccine
EU - Baxter International Inc.'s vaccine to combat the bird flu today won an endorsement from European health officials.
Friday, January 11, 2008
European Union - Bird Flu News ThePoultrySite
EU Endorse Measures for Poland and Germany
EU - Following recent outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian influenza in Poland and Germany, the Standing Committee on the Food Chain and Animal Health today voted in favour of a Decision confirming the eradication and control measures taken by those two Member States.
Friday, December 28, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News CIDRAP
European countries report more H5N1 in poultry
EU - Germany, Poland, and Russia recently reported fresh outbreaks of H5N1 avian influenza in poultry, according to media accounts and reports from the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE).
Friday, November 30, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News AFP
Flu Pandemic Would Catch World Unprepared:
UNITED NATIONS — The world remains unprepared to cope with a pandemic in humans arising from bird flu, a UN and World Bank report released Thursday found.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News TheTrumpet
Bird Flu Spreading Across Europe
EU - Bird flu may become entrenched throughout parts of Europe, the United Nations recently reported. The statement came after German scientists discovered the fatal h5n1 strain of the avian influenza virus in seemingly healthy ducks and geese.
Tuesday, September 04, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News TheAge
UN says domestic birds to blame for flu
EU - Samples from 350,000 healthy wild birds in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Americas have tested negative for bird flu, offering further proof that spread of the virus is mostly contained in domesticated poultry, the United Nations says.
Friday, August 03, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News AllAfrica
Space Technology Used to Fight Bird-Flu
UN - As more innovative solutions are sought to combat bird-flu, the United Nations has revealed it is looking towards applying space technology to help countries fight the virus, writes Lavinia Mahlangu.
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News CordisNews
Avian flu vaccines safe, say EFSA experts
EU - Vaccination programmes using drugs currently available on the market are providing a safe and effective means of protecting domestic poultry from outbreaks of highly pathogenic strains of avian flu (H5N1), according to the latest scientific opinion to be released by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA).
Friday, May 18, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News FoodQuality
EU Countdown To Bird Flu Amendments Continues
EU - The European poultry industry has just six weeks left to prepare itself for new proposals designed to prevent the spread of H5N1 avian influenza into the food chain, the European Commission has warned.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News CordisNews
Research Reveals Ongoing Evolution Of Bird Flu In Europe
EU - Detailed genetic studies of H5N1 bird flu samples collected in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have revealed the existence of a distinct Euro-African strain of the disease in the region and shed new light on the spread of the disease.
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News UniversityOfMaryland
“Bird Flu” Genome Study Shows New Strains, Western Spread
EU - A team of researchers report the first ever large-scale sequencing of western genomes of the deadly avian influenza virus, H5N1, that confirms not only that the virus has very recently spread west from Asia, but that two of the new western strains have already independently combined, or ?reassorted,? to create a new strain.
Wednesday, April 04, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News Scoop
UN Agency Warns Bird Flu Still Threatens Lives
UN - Despite Fewer Outbreaks This Year, UN Agency Warns Bird Flu Still Threatens Lives
Tuesday, April 03, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News ZEENEWS.com
Bird flu declining but disease continues to spread: FAO
EU - The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has said that bird flu is on the decline around the world, but warned the disease continues to spread in different countries, threatening the lives of those working around poultry and hurting farm economies.
Friday, March 23, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News Thestar
No need for poultry vaccination in Europe -U.N. vet
E.U - Europe has boosted control and response systems to bird flu and does not need a preventive vaccination of poultry to fight the disease, a top United Nations veterinary expert said on Thursday.
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News Peace Journalism
Device Could Revolutionize Bird Flu Detection
UN - A $1,000 mobile testing device no bigger than a small portable television that could revolutionize the fight against bird flu and many other livestock diseases by saving vital time in identifying the source of outbreaks.
Friday, February 23, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News MSN money
Europe warned on flu pandemic planning
EU - Europe needs at least two more years to be prepared adequately for a pandemic flu outbreak in humans, according to the head of the European Union agency in charge of tackling infectious disease. In an interview with the FT, Zsuzsanna Jakab, director of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, said it would take two to three years to be "much better prepared to respond", even if the current political momentum could be maintained.
Thursday, February 08, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News Unicef
UNICEF launches EU-sponsored 240000-euro project against avian flu in Kazakhstan
EU - The European Commission announced this week it will allocate 240,000 Euros to prevent the spread of avian flu in Kazakhstan. The funds will support a joint project between the Kazakh Health Ministry, the European Commission and UNICEF to educate the public about the disease and how to prevent it.
Monday, January 15, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News Financial Times
Europe warned over resurgence of bird flu
EU - The deadly H5N1 strain of avian influenza is making a seasonal resurgence in Asia and could easily spread to Europe again this year, the World Health Organisation warned on Sunday.
Friday, January 12, 2007
European Union - Bird Flu News Reuters
EU tightens pet bird import rules
BRUSSELS - EU animal health experts have tightened rules for the import of live captive birds as part of the bloc's strategy to fight bird flu, the EU's executive Commission said in a statement on Thursday.
Next 20


Our Main Sponsors
 
Supporting Partners