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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 InfluenzaWhat to look for
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
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
Latest Avian / Bird Flu NewsCatch 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 Friday, July 18, 2008 Turkey Says Bird Flu Cases Disappear ANKARA, TURKEY - Turkey officially informed the World Organization for Animal Health that avian influenza disappeared from the country. Tuesday, March 25, 2008 Bird Flu Detected in Turkish Village ISTANBUL, TURKEY - Authorities detected bird flu in chickens at a village in northwestern Turkey and culled 1,000 birds, state-run media said Saturday. Tuesday, January 22, 2008 Bird flu found on farm in Turkey ANKARA - A bird flu outbreak has been discovered among poultry in a northern Turkish village, Anatolia news agency reported, citing a ministry statement. Tuesday, April 03, 2007 25,000 Turkeys Slaughtered at W.Va. Farm TURKEY - A strain of avian flu different from the one that has infected humans in Africa and Asia was detected at a turkey farm, requiring the slaughter of 25,000 birds, state agriculture officials said Monday. Monday, March 19, 2007 World's bird flu doctors meeting in Turkey TURKEY - Doctors who have treated H5N1 avian flu patients are meeting in a Turkish seaside town to try to find answers to the myriad mysteries that remain about what the brutal virus does to its human victims and how dismal survival rates might be improved. Saturday, February 17, 2007 Bird flu spreads to 10 villages in Turkey TURKEY - Bird flu has spread to 10 villages in southeast Turkey, where four children died of the virus a year ago, but no human cases have been reported, agriculture officials said on Friday. Provincial agriculture officials said bird flu had been detected on Friday in two villages in Diyarbakir, one of two neighbouring provinces in the poor and rural southeast where the virus has hit. More tests were needed to determine whether it was the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus, which was detected in the region last week. The two villages were quarantined and 340 birds were destroyed, the officials said. A year ago, the virus killed four children in the region, and was also blamed for a fall in revenues in Turkey's important tourist industry. Friday, February 09, 2007 Bird flu resurfaces among poultry in southeast Turkey ANKARA - Bird flu has been detected among poultry in a village in the southeastern Turkish province of Batman, with experts still examining whether it is the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain, the agriculture ministry said Thursday. Thursday, April 13, 2006 TURKMENISTAN: WHO praises bird flu measures ANKARA - The World Health Organization (WHO) has welcomed the Turkmen government's efforts on its preparedness for a possible bird flu outbreak in the country, which neighbours Kazakhstan where the virus resurfaced in March. "We are glad t Saturday, March 04, 2006 Bird flu detected in Turkey's Istanbul, Rize TURKEY - Bird flu cases were detected in Turkey's biggest city of Istanbul and Black Sea province of Rize, Turkish Zaman newspaper reported on Friday. Turkish National Coordination Center for Bird Flu was quoted as reporting that bird flu cases were detec Friday, February 03, 2006 WHO chief says bird flu still little understood ANKARA - The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday the death of an Iraqi girl believed to have had bird flu showed how little was known about the disease. Tests carried out by a British laboratory on the Iraqi teenager have confirmed she died Wednesday, February 01, 2006 Number Of Bird Flu Positive Cities Rises To 31 ANKARA - Bird Flu National Coordination Center stated on Monday that the number of bird flu positive cities rose from 28 to 31. The number of bird flu detected localities is 67, added the center. Tuesday, January 31, 2006 Turkish Cypriots fight bird flu amid tourism fears NICOSIA - Turkish Cypriot authorities said on Monday they were worried an outbreak of avian flu among poultry could hit badly needed tourism revenues and said they were stepping up efforts to prevent the virus spreading. The Saturday, January 21, 2006 Turkey says neighbors hushing up bird flu TURKEY - Turkey accused its neighbors on Friday of hushing up outbreaks of bird flu, complicating the fight against a virus that has killed four Turkish children. "It is unofficially known that this illness exists in our neighboring countries which are ru Thursday, January 19, 2006 TURKEY: Poultry farmers feel impact of bird flu TURKEY - Poultry farmers in Turkey want to cull millions of their egg-laying fowl following a sharp decline in egg consumption after four confirmed deaths because of avian influenza or 'bird flu' in the country. "We can hard Wednesday, January 18, 2006 PM tells worried Turks to eat chicken and eggs TURKEY - Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan told Turkish consumers on Tuesday it was safe to eat chicken despite an outbreak of bird flu in the country which has killed four children and led to the culling of around a million birds. &nbs TURKEY: WHO says bird flu fatality rate low TURKEY - The fatality rate of avian flu cases in Turkey, otherwise known as bird flu, remains low in comparison to cases observed in Asia, the World Health Organization (WHO) noted on Tuesday. "Turkey is seeing a fatality r Monday, January 16, 2006 Turkey confirms fourth human bird flu death TURKEY - Turkey said on Monday a fourth person had died of bird flu as authorities slaughtered tens of thousands of birds to try to contain the outbreak. Human victims had been confined to East Asia until this month, when three infected children from the Bird Flu Fears Rattle Turkey's Chicken Capital TURKEY - It's not the Eiffel Tower or Statue of Liberty, but nothing says more about the essence of this town than the 12-foot-tall plaster chicken that stands outside the Mudurnu poultry plant in this green Turkish valley. Saturday, January 14, 2006 Turks' OK sought for bird-flu testing TURKEY - Officials of the World Health Organization, anxious to get a better understanding of the deadly bird flu strain spreading across Turkey, said Friday that they have asked the government for permission to send teams into villages to take blood samp Turkey's Bird-Flu Outbreaks Began 3 Weeks Before Initial Report TURKEY - The current wave of lethal bird flu in Turkey that has infected at least 18 people began in mid November, more than three weeks before an initial report, the World Organization for Animal Health said. Outbreaks of the H5N1 avian influenza virus
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How to Recognise Avian Influenza
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.
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.

