Japan confirms bird flu outbreak at poultry farm

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Pastor Dale Morgan

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Jan 13, 2007, 8:59:39 PM1/13/07
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*Plagues, Pestilences and Diseases*


*Japan confirms bird flu outbreak at poultry farm*

13 Jan 2007 10:05:28 GMT
Source: Reuters


TOKYO, Jan 13 (Reuters) - Japan said on Saturday it had confirmed a case
of bird flu at a poultry farm in the southwest of the country, but could
not immediately determine if the outbreak was due to a highly pathogenic
strain of the virus.

Some 3,800 chickens have died on the farm in Miyazaki prefecture since
Wednesday, an outbreak that if confirmed as due to the lethal H5N1
strain, would be the first in Japan since 2004. There were no reports of
human infections.

A Miyazaki prefectural official said that tests showed that the chickens
were infected with an H5 subtype of the virus, but further testing was
needed to determine whether the virus had the N1 component that would
make it the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain or the less lethal H5N2.

Local authorities have independently from Saturday started sterilising
areas near the poultry farm, another official at the Miyazaki
government's livestock section said.

The Agriculture Ministry in a statement said that all birds at the farm,
which originally had over 12,000 birds, will be destroyed from Sunday.

The ministry has also restricted movements of commodity items from farms
located near the site of the latest outbreak.

In the area within a 10-km radius of the farm there are 16 other farms,
which in total have about 328,000 birds.

Miyazaki on Japan's southernmost main island of Kyushu is the country's
top breeder of chickens, local authorities say. As of Feb 1, 2006, the
number of chickens that it was raising for meat was 18.4 million birds.

Between January and March in 2004, Japan had four outbreaks of the H5N1
type strain in poultry, including an outbreak in Kyoto in western Japan
in February 2004 that led to the disposal of about 240,000 chickens and
20 million eggs.

A less virulent strain of bird flu, caused by the H5N2 virus, was found
in a poultry farm in Ibaraki prefecture in June 2005, and since then,
there have been outbreaks of the weaker strain at 41 farms, the last one
in January 2006.

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