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Maryland - Avian flu in poultry 2025

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  • Maryland - Avian flu in poultry 2025

    Preliminary Testing Confirms Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in Caroline County

    January 10, 2025


    ANNAPOLIS, MD (January 10, 2025)— State laboratory testing has detected a case of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza (HPAI) in Caroline County following routine sampling of a broiler operation and investigation by the Maryland Department of Agriculture. This marks the first case of H5N1 at a Maryland commercial poultry operation since 2023 and the third commercial operation in the Delmarva region in the last 30 days when two Kent County, DE returned positive results.

    State officials have quarantined all affected premises, and birds on the properties are being or have been depopulated to prevent the spread of the disease. Birds from affected flocks will not enter the food system.

    Confirmation by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Veterinary Services Laboratory is pending with final results anticipated in the coming days.

    “High Pathogenic Avian influenza or HPAI does not affect poultry meat or egg products, which remain healthy and safe to eat and handle,” said Maryland Department of Agriculture Secretary Kevin Atticks. “The Maryland Department of Agriculture, local health department, USDA and partner organizations are working diligently to address the situation, including quarantining and testing nearby flocks. We continue to urge commercial growers and backyard flock owners to be on heightened alert for HPAI.”

    Avian influenza is a highly contagious airborne respiratory virus that spreads easily among birds through nasal and eye secretions, as well as manure. The virus can be spread in various ways from flock to flock, including by wild birds, through contact with infected poultry, by equipment, and on the clothing and shoes of caretakers. This virus affects poultry, like chickens, ducks, and turkeys, along with some wild bird species such as ducks, geese, shorebirds, and raptors.

    According to the Maryland Department of Health, the risk of transmission between birds and the general public is low. Those who work directly with poultry or dairy farms may be more at risk and should follow key biosecurity practices.

    The Maryland Department of Agriculture recommends the following common-sense biosecurity steps if HPAI is suspected on personal property , wild birds, or in a commercial operation.The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has guidance for farmer workers here.
    • Look for signs of illness. Know the warning signs of infectious bird diseases.
    • Report suspected sick birds:
    • To report a possible case of HPAI call the Maryland Department of Agriculture at 410-841-5810.
    • Commercial chicken growers and backyard flock owners can email questions about the outbreak to MD.Birdflu@maryland.gov.

    Key biosecurity practices:
    • Clean and disinfect transportation. Don’t walk through or drive trucks, tractors, or equipment in areas where waterfowl or other wildlife feces may be. If you can’t avoid this, clean your shoes, vehicle, and equipment thoroughly to prevent bringing disease agents back to your flock. This is especially important when visiting with farmers or those who hunt wild fowl such as when gathering at a local coffee shop, restaurant, or gas station.
    • Remove loose feed. Don’t give wild birds, rodents, and insects a free lunch. Remove spilled or uneaten feed right away, and make sure feed storage units are secure and free of holes. Wild birds can carry HPAI.
    • Keep visitors to a minimum. Only allow those people who take care of your poultry to come in contact with your birds, including family and friends. Make sure everyone who has contact with your flock follows biosecurity principles.
    • Wash your hands before and after coming in contact with live poultry. Wash with soap and water. If using a hand sanitizer, first remove manure, feathers, and other materials from your hands because disinfectants will not penetrate organic matter or caked-on dirt.
    • Provide disposable boot covers (preferred) and/or disinfectant footbaths for anyone having contact with your flock. If using a footbath, be sure to remove all droppings, mud or debris from boots and shoes using a long-handled scrub brush BEFORE stepping into the disinfectant footbath, and always keep it clean.
    • Change clothes before entering poultry areas and before exiting the property.
      Visitors should wear protective outer garments or disposable coveralls, boots, and headgear when handling birds, and shower and/or change clothes when leaving the facility.
    • Clean and disinfect tools or equipment before moving them to a new poultry facility. Before allowing vehicles, trucks, tractors, or tools and equipment—including egg flats and cases that have come in contact with birds or their droppings—to exit the property, make sure they are cleaned and disinfected to prevent contaminated equipment from transporting disease. Do not move or reuse items that cannot be cleaned and disinfected—such as cardboard egg flats.

    For more information on avian influenza, visit: https://mda.maryland.gov/Pages/AvianFlu.aspx

    Note to media: Due to biosecurity concerns, no on-site interviews, photos, or video are allowed. For all media requests, email: jessica.hackett2@maryland.gov.


  • #2
    Poultry Farmers Urged to Practice Enhanced Biosecurity
    January 9, 2025


    High Path Avian Influenza Identified in Maryland Wildlife

    ANNAPOLIS, MD (January 9, 2025) – The Maryland Department of Agriculture is urging all poultry farmers to remain vigilant and practice enhanced biosecurity on their farms after U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) confirmed findings of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) in snow geese in Dorchester and Worcester Counties on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. These wild bird detections come in the midst of HPAI cases in two commercial poultry operations in Kent County, DE.

    “The detections in our region should be very concerning to commercial and backyard flock owners,” said Secretary Kevin Atticks. “MDA is monitoring the situation very closely and will continue to provide updates as they become available.”
    ​snip-
    Commercial and backyard flock owners are urged to follow these guidelines to maintain a sanitary, biosecure premise:
    ...
    • Report any unusual bird deaths or sudden increases in very sick birds to the MDA Animal Health Program at 410-841-5810 or after-hours to 410-841-5971. Also contact the USDA at 866-536-7593.
    https://news.maryland.gov/mda/press-...biosecurity-3/


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    • #3
      Source: https://www.cbsnews.com/baltimore/ne...ltry-bird-flu/

      Maryland's second case of H5N1 bird flu detected in Queen Anne's County
      By Adam Thompson
      Updated on: January 14, 2025 / 10:04 PM EST / CBS Baltimore​

      BALTIMORE -- Maryland's second case of the H5N1 bird flu has been detected at a poultry farm in Queen Anne's County, according to the Maryland Department of Agriculture.

      Officials learned of the bird flu after conducting a routine sampling of the farm.

      The birds on the properties are being "depopulated" to prevent the spread of the disease and will not enter the food supply, according to the AG Department.

      Officials have detected the bird flu at four commercial poultry farms in the Delmarva region.​..

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      • #4
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        • #5
          Media [bolding is mine]

          Maryland Expands Dead Wild Bird Collection as Bird Flu Cases Spread

          ​Jan 17, 2025

          MARYLAND - The Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has announced the extension of a contract with the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) allowing for the safe disposal of dead wild birds as bird flu cases continue to spread in the region.

          Under the contract, USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service provides Maryland with specialized technicians trained to safely eliminate and remove sick or dead wild birds that could be spreading Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza. The $30,000 expansion, announced January 17, will allow for additional staff to assist in dead bird disposal through September.

          The announcement comes as bird flu detections continue to spring up on Delmarva. As of Friday, the virus has been at least presumptively detected in seven Delmarva counties: Kent, Sussex (DE), Caroline,Dorchester, Worcester, Queen Anne’s (MD), and Accomack (VA).

          continued: https://www.wboc.com/news/maryland-e...d011f0127.html

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          • #6
            Region adds three more cases of avian flu

            January 17, 2025
            By Sean Clougherty

            Delmarva’s poultry industry added three more cases of avian influenza this week to its recent outbreak, totaling six since the start of the year.
            On Jan. 14 Maryland Department of Agriculture announced a presumptive positive test result on a Queen Anne’s County commercial flock after a routine sampling on the farm. The following day, MDA announced another case on a Caroline County broiler farm that’s within the initial control area of the first Caroline County positive farm announced on Jan. 10.

            On Jan. 16, Virginia officials announced HPAI had been detected in a commercial poultry farm on the Eastern Shore of Virginia in Accomack County.
            State officials have quarantined all affected premises, and birds on the properties are being or have been depopulated to prevent the spread of the disease. Birds from affected flocks will not enter the food system.

            In a Jan. 17 industry conference call, Maryland and Delaware officials expressed the importance of working in a unified manner to control the disease.
            “We consider Delmarva, when we consider situations like this, to be one, not three separate states,” said Micheals Scuse, Delaware agriculture secretary.
            Officials reviewed the chronology of infections in wildlife and on farms and ways to limit wildlife, especially wild birds, from entering farm.
            “What’s critical here is not just enhanced but top, top, elite level biosecurity,” said Kevin Atticks, Maryland agriculture secretary.

            Maryland and Delaware have in place orders for moving poultry litter through Feb. 8. In the orders, poultry litter generated on a farm that is to remain on that farm must be kept in a covered manure storage structure on the farm or piled and covered in a field on the farm to prevent wildlife access.

            Questions arose on the call about what materials can be used as a cover, including straw, mushroom soil and wood shavings. Steve Connelly, deputy secretary of agriculture in Maryland said the goal of covering piles is to keep wild birds from congregating on them so some methods could work but some materials or methods will not.
            “We’re really concerned about the wildlife effect of harboring the disease,” Connelly said. “We’re really trying to keep the wildlife off of new stockpiles.”

            Georgie Cartanza, University of Delaware Extension poultry agent said poorly composted mortalities in litter can be a strong attractant to wild birds and as well as any access to mortalities on the farm.
            “And you have control over that,” she noted.

            Officials urged growers to put in place any reasonable deterrent that would keep wildlife away.
            Cartanza said removing vegetation around retention ponds will make them less enticing to birds and stringing wire across the ponds in a grid pattern will make it nearly impossible to for birds to land on the water.

            Kevin Sullivan with USDA Wildlife Services said they can “haze and harass” wild birds like geese and vultures without a permit to keep them away.
            “You’ve got to assume those birds are sick,” he said. “Don’t let those birds land on your fields.”

            Delmarva’s poultry industry added three more cases of avian influenza this week to its recent outbreak, totaling six since the start of the year. On Jan. 14 Maryland Department of Agriculture announced a presumptive positive test result on a Queen Anne’s County commercial flock after a routine sampling on the farm. The following day, MDA announced another case on a […]

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