Avian flu outbreak killing wild birds

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Avian flu has jumped into wild seabirds and is spreading fast.

Though the risk to humans is very low, it serves as another reminder of how connected we are to nature. 

Avian flu has re-emerged as a major driver of bird deaths across the UK after a series of localised outbreaks in the past few years.

Highly pathogenic avian influenza, also known as bird flu, was treated primarily as a problem for chickens and other domestic birds until the latest outbreak of the disease in the past few weeks.

This article was original published in The Conversation.

Farmers were ordered to keep the animals indoors for six months over the winter, which is why the UK had a period with no free-range eggs. The outbreaks have also triggered further localised responses such as culls.

Outbreak 

Now, reports that large numbers of wild seabirds have been found dead in Scotland, and increasingly in England and Wales, suggests that avian flu is now prevalent in wild birds across most of northern Britain.

I encountered a number of these birds myself on the Northumberland coast. Scenes like these will make the crisis far more visible to the general public, and naturally, they will be asking what more we can do to tackle the outbreak.

The 2021-22 outbreak is a global problem, with cases of the virulent H5N1 subtype detected in West Africa, Asia, and nearly every country of Europe and North America.

It is primarily a disease of domesticated birds, where it is thought to have originated, and has led to the culling of hundreds of millions of birds, including 38 million in the US this year alone.

Chickens

In the UK, the disease was first detected in October 2021. As elsewhere, the outbreak was at first largely confined to poultry, and farmers were forced to cull 500,000 chickens and other birds.

In response, the UK established an Avian Influenza Prevention Zone including buffer zones of 10km around detected cases, with restrictions on bird movement and enhanced biosecurity.

Over winter there were reports of a number of wild bird populations being affected by avian flu, including great skua, pink-footed geese and barnacle geese.

Though the risk to humans is very low, it serves as another reminder of how connected we are to nature. 

These included the mass death of 4,000 birds on the Solway Firth, representing one-third of the Svalbard barnacle goose population that spend winters in the area.

Breeding 

As spring has turned to summer, there is now no doubt that avian flu is now spreading into a wider diversity of wild birds in the UK.

For some species, this probably reflects their return to summer breeding colonies and the increased mixing - since avian flu is spread by contact with saliva or droppings.

As this breeding season reaches its peak, a wide array of seabirds have been affected, including great skua, eider ducks, fulmar, terns, gannets and guillemots.

The UK holds over half the world’s population of gannet and great skua, both of which have been officially recognised as birds of moderate conservation concern “amber status”. 

Avian flu adds to the litany of problems these birds face – from climate change to entanglement in abandoned fishing gear – and increases the concerns of organisations such as RSPB and Birdlife, who already consider this outbreak to be the worst the UK has ever faced.

Restrictions 

Conservation organisations have asked for more resources to help with monitoring and tackling the problem.

Many bird wardens and reserve managers already work on the nature reserves most affected by avian flu, and so they will be an important part of the solution.

We could also reduce the level of human disturbance at particularly sensitive sites, for example by introducing buffer zones or seasonal restrictions.

But, more broadly, we simply need more surveillance of avian flu so that we can get a better idea of the problem. This will mean also giving the relevant government departments and agencies the resources they need to monitor and test more wild birds.

Gulls 

In summer, avian flu retains infectivity in the environment for up to 18 days. So a large number of dead birds on the coast with possible infections presents a continuing pathway for transmission to birds of prey and carrion feeders, particularly gulls, which are known to be susceptible to avian flu.

Increasing the number of carcasses being collected would have the added benefit of removing the potential for carrion feeders to become infected, and so further infect other birds.

Given some of these seabirds can range over huge distances in search of food – up to 400km for gannets, for instance – we will need a national approach to this, with coordination across the four nations of the UK.

Biosecurity 

And because the virus has been repeatedly transmitted between the domestic stocks and wild bird populations, we should also look again at biosecurity measures in the poultry industry.

What does this mean for the general public? Although avian flu is a zoonotic disease like COVID-19, the risk to human health is very low, and cases in humans have almost exclusively arisen from close contact between bird keepers and their stock. The advice for the public is not to touch any dead birds you see and to report them.

If you feed wild birds, remember to wash and disinfect feeders every week and to clean bird baths every day, as avian flu is mainly transmitted via saliva and droppings. 

Human 

And if you’re out walking the dog, keep a closer eye on them when you’re on the beach or by water, and use a lead when you’re on a nature reserve or see a dead bird.

There is no doubt that the increased visibility of the deaths will bring home the scale of the problem to the general public. Bird flu has now “arrived” in our minds, and will take on more prominence as the summer continues and holidays begin.

Though the risk to humans is very low, it serves as another reminder of how connected we are to nature, and how our interactions with the natural world have huge consequences for what we regard as “human” systems.

This Author 

 is the vice chancellor's senior research fellow at Northumbria University, Newcastle. This article was original published in The Conversation