There’s a new type of bird flu in Canada and it’s killing wild birds en masse
VOICES: There’s a new type of Avian Influenza (AI) in Canada and it’s killing wild birds. A new type of H5N1 to be exact, one that is part of a group of AIs called “Clade 2.3.4.4b” that are killing wild birds en masse all over the world.
The 'flockdown' has lifted, but have chickens' struggles ended?
SPECIAL REPORT: The five-month-long bird flu ‘flockdown’, a set of quarantine measures affecting the UK’s domestic poultry population, has finally come to an end. Claire Hamlett reports on the struggles faced by chickens and more yet to come as chicken-keepers return to work following Covid-19.
H5N1 found in British human, foxes and other mammals as Europe faces “largest bird flu epidemic ever”
A rare case of avian influenza infecting a human living in England was reported this week. Bird-to-human transmission is rare and human-to-human rarer still, but with UK outbreaks now double last year’s and predictions of Europe’s worst bird flu epidemic ever - coupled with the high mutation rate of influenza and cases of H5N1 detected in foxes, seals and other mammals - a human bird flu pandemic feels closer than ever.
How bird rescues are being threatened by avian flu outbreaks
Recent reports of avian influenza outbreaks have sparked fresh fears about the spread of new strains among humans, but we often forget about the impact of ‘bird flu lockdowns’ on the work of rescue groups and sanctuaries, writes Claire Hamlett.
The first cases of H5N8 bird flu in humans remind us that Covid-19 is just a ‘dress rehearsal’ and farming is the epicentre
The UK government has just announced an end of all major lockdown restrictions in time for the summer, yet the news that the first cases of H5N8 in humans - at a bird farm in Russia - only serves to remind us that it is only a matter of time before a worse pandemic strikes.
Is Bird Flu the Next Global Pandemic? | Dr Michael Greger
Over the last few decades, hundreds of human pathogens have emerged at a rate unprecedented in human history. Emerged from where? Mostly from animals, says Dr Michael Greger in our first Surge guest blog. Part of the Not If, But When campaign.