News just reported another case in Missouri. They did not say where, only that 130 birds were destroyed.
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Another fairly dumb question... We have a wetland very close to where our chickens live. The wetland usually has wild ducks and a pair of wild geese, who frequently visit the yard where the chickens free-range. Would it be safer to keep the chickens in a covered tractor where the geese don't go? Should we just lock them up in the coop, or would the tractor option be safe enough? We are located in SE Wisconsin.
The carcasses are probably incinerated. They are not put into the "food chain".
The litter is also destroyed. The entire building is thoroughly disinfected and then sets empty.
I am curious how you think the feed could be carrying the virus???
I have a dozen laying hens that do free range on our 2 acre property. The nearest located to be effected is about 35 minutes south of us. As we are more centrally located in Iowa, just outside the Des Moines metro area. Is there anything I should or should not be doing? Should I be keeping them from free ranging? What about feeding song birds....should I stop that too? Any other ideas for backyard/small flock owners?
Another fairly dumb question... We have a wetland very close to where our chickens live. The wetland usually has wild ducks and a pair of wild geese, who frequently visit the yard where the chickens free-range. Would it be safer to keep the chickens in a covered tractor where the geese don't go? Should we just lock them up in the coop, or would the tractor option be safe enough? We are located in SE Wisconsin.
The long and short of it is that if you're keeping chickens then you should at no time ever be feeding song birds on the same property. If you don't care about the health and well being of you're chickens, think about all the poor song birds whose health you are endangering with your chickens.
It was in Lewis County. (Monticello). A backyard flock, mixed poultry.News just reported another case in Missouri. They did not say where, only that 130 birds were destroyed.
The Pharm industry may be working on a human vaccine but a chicken vaccine would make it impossible to tell if any chicken in any particular flock had been exposed to the H5N2 virus or had only been vaccinated against it. Therefor I don't expect the CDC, FDA, & USDA to approve a vaccine for chickens.The song birds are going to be there whether you feed them or not. As far as there not being an effective vaccine, actually they are working on one. Last I heard it was in testing stages.
It doesn't sound ignorant to me as far as the other buildings go. Chances are it hasn't reached those buildings. Of course if even one bird is found to have it, it is assumed that the virus has spread to others, especially those in the same building, it is just incubating and not showing visible signs yet. However, the problem with lettting it play out in a flock with such extremely large numbers (those thousands in a building) is that it give the virus the chance to mutate to possibly a more dangerous strain, even a strain that may infect humans. So, I can understand not letting it play out in a building. I still don't understand the need to cull other houses that have no symptoms. Unless they just feel it is inevitable that they will be infected. I don't know why they would feel that way though.
What is being tested for is the mere exposure to the N5H2 virus. No bird that I know about has died from this pathogen. They only test for the specific antibodies that show that these chickens have been exposed, not if they have a raging case of N5H2.