
The take a look at confirms the avian flu after masses of lifeless giz discovered close to Lipton, Sansk.
According to the Ministry of Environment, hundreds of dead Giz found this spring in the fields near Lipton, 90 km, 90 kilometers northeast of Regina, in the fields near Sansk.
The tests completed earlier this month confirmed that birds died of H5, which is highly pathogenic tension of avian flu.
IGA Stasiak, a wildlife health expert from the ministry, said that several reports have received several reports. He said that in some cases, hundreds of dead birds were reported at the sites.
“This is actually quite unusual to see this scale of mortality,” said Stasech.
“With this recent stress it affects birds more seriously, so we have seen an increase in mortality in the wild bird population, which is related.”
The number of wild birds dying from the avian flu is higher than normal, but has not reached the level of 2022, when the virus was new to the Canadian bird population, Stasic said.
3 farms under quarantine
Avian influenza spreads in contact with infected manure, feed and water. According to Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA), it also broadcasts on clothing and vehicles.
Symptoms in birds include lethargy, jerks, gasp for breath and sudden death.
Positive avian flu tests in Lipton region were found in Ross Giz, stated.
The CFIA has also detected the avian flu in domestic chicken and has been later kept. Three fields under quarantine,
One of the fields, near the site, is in Lipton’s RM, where the dead Ross Giz was found. The location is listed on the CFIA website as a non-commercial, non-peaks base.
A non-commercial poultry operation in RM of Colonsay and one-third in the Indian head of RM are also subject to CFIA quarantine.
Henchman
Michael Kautzman, Executive Director of Suskechewan’s chicken farmers, said the avian flu is worrying and can destroy poultry stock.
“Once they become infected, the virus works very quickly in birds and it ends to kill them … and it is very early,” the coron said.
“It is very stressful on farmers, it is very stressful on the industry.”
Cautzman said that his organization has contacted poultry growers to remind them to follow the existing bio-protection measures to help prevent infections on other sites. Those measures include limiting visitors to the fields, and cleaning vehicles, cleaning clothes and shoes.
“This is something that you try and reduce, but it is never 100 percent, no matter what you do.”
Cautzman said that CFIA is brought if they become ill to try to stop the spread of birds.
Stasac stated that the stress of avian flu in the lipton-region’s Giz has been found in the farm of a British Columbia ostrich.
The owners of that ostrich farm are fighting a CFIA order to reduce 400 birds after detecting viruses in some animals last year.
Trent Bollinger, a Western College of Veterinary Medicine and a professor at the Western College of Veterinary Medicine and a professor at the Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative, confirmed that the dead birds coming for avian flu testing and corpse exams have increased, but they hope that the number of migratory weather would end.
“In Alberta, they are not seeing an increase in the same kind of impermanence,” he said.
“It is probably reflecting various flyway of the Gizz.”
Bollinger said the avian flu is a heavy viral infection that attacks birds tissue.
“It is a serious systemic disease. It can cause neurological damage, it can cause respiratory signs. It can cause necrosis in the liver,” he said.
“Fear … The possibility of change will result in transmission and easy spread in other species including people.”