Bird Flu USDA confirms high-path H5N1 in Washington state (in birds)

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
USDA confirms high-path H5N1 in Washington state

Filed Under:
Avian Influenza (Bird Flu)
Jim Wappes | Editorial Director | CIDRAP News Jan 21, 2015

In an apparent first, highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 has been detected in a US bird, in Washington state, according to a report filed by John Clifford, DVM, deputy administrator with the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).

The report, posted yesterday by the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), details a novel H5N1 virus found in a wild green-winged teal in Whatcom County that resulted from reassortment between a Eurasian (EA)-type H5N8 virus and North American avian influenza strains.

The virus was detected in a hunter-killed bird as part of increased avian flu surveillance in wild birds, according to the report. Whole-genome sequencing placed it in EA H5 clade 2.3.4.4.

Its PB2, H5, NP, and MP components are more than 99% identical to the HPAI H5N8 strain found in a wild gyrfalcon in the same county in December. It also contains PB1 genes that are 98% identical to those in a HPAI H5N2 found in a northern pintail duck, also in Whatcom County in December, as well as PA, N1, and NS components from a North American low-pathogenic wild bird lineage.

"Such findings are not unexpected as the EA-H5N8 virus continues to circulate," the report states. It concludes that the new H5N1 reassortant virus "has NOT been found in commercial poultry anywhere in the United States."

Information on the USDA Web site says that HPAI H5N1 has not been previously detected in the United States, but the OIE report lists 2004 as the date of a previous occurrence of the disease. That might, however, refer to the detection of HPAI H5N2 in Texas that year, or to a low-path avian flu outbreak. A phone call to Clifford's office could not immediately clarify the details.
H5N2, H5N8 in Idaho

In related news, the Idaho State Department of Agriculture (ISDA) said in a news release yesterday that HPAI H5N2 has been detected in a backyard poultry flock in that state, as well as in domestic falcons. In addition, HPAI H5N8 has been detected in wild birds in the state, the agency said.

The outbreak in the backyard flock was first reported by the media on Jan 19. The detections of both strains were the result of increased surveillance, the ISDA said.

The three affected falcons and the unspecified number of poultry are both in Canyon County in southwestern Idaho, and the H5N8-positive ducks were sampled in Gooding County south central Idaho.

"Both the H5N8 and H5N2 strains of HPAI confirmed in Idaho have previously been identified in incidents in backyard domestic poultry and wild fowl in other northwestern states. It is critical that backyard flock owners and poultry producers take every opportunity to prevent contact between domestic birds and the wild waterfowl that carry the avian influenza virus," Bill Barton, DVM, ISDA state veterinarian, said in the release.

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2015/01/usda-confirms-high-path-h5n1-washington-state
 

CnMO

Veteran Member
From 4-15-15 www.startribune.com MN newspaper.

1.4 million affected Turkeys in Minnesota have H5N2.

Michael Osterholm prominent infectious disease expert at Univ. of MN said " It's clearly a major epidemic."

It's been recently found at turkey farms in N.D., S.D., Iowa, MN, and Wisconsin.
 

CnMO

Veteran Member
H5N2 is in 17 States in USA, most are on the Mississippi Flyway, and is said to be carried by the wild birds migrating.

8 million turkey have been lost so far, mostly from the Jenny-0 farms.
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On 4-20-15 H5N2 was found in Osceola County , Iowa, 5.3 million Chicken to be killed.
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H5N2 was found in 2 Snow Geese in St. Charles County, MO.

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Backyard chicken are being affected , but can't find a count number for them.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
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I guess I'm glad I bit the bullet and invested in 15 Holland White turkey poults to be delivered in 3 weeks! If this spreads, Thanksgiving turkeys are going to be VERY expensive.

Summerthyme
 
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