With a real risk of an outbreak now on New Zealand’s horizon, Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) representatives and leading industry officials were working hard to prepare for the possibility, focusing on such issues as decontamination and the disposal of dead birds.
Study groups from the stakeholder entities were about to embark on two week-long trips to Australia and Europe to look at farms there, talk to regulators, and to learn more about the disease, Brooks said.
Twelve of the country’s 146 commercial-scaled egg or poultry producers were in Northland and with the risk now coming from the south, would at least have slightly longer to prepare for any outbreak, Brooks said.
For Northland, ironically, in the past the risk of avian influenza would’ve been from birds from the Northern Hemisphere, but we’ve never found it (the disease),” he said.
The migratory birds from the north tended to be waders, which didn’t seem to get avian influenza. It was also thought that if they did get it, the birds would succumb to the disease before they got here. It kills within 24 to 48 hours.
While Australia had battled outbreaks of HPAI, it hadn’t yet had H5N1 of the type we needed to fear. The flurry of strains recently there didn’t get into wild birds so there was no concern about migratory birds from Australia bringing it across to New Zealand.
However, the H5N1 strain, now endemic in wild birds in Antarctica, posed a different risk. Although in the part of the continent closest to South America – so still thousands of kilometres away from New Zealand – there was a potential risk that a bird such as a Skua Gull could eat a dead sea lion that had caught avian influenza and could then fly here with the disease, Brooks said.
H5N1 transferred to some mammals as it had done in the US where dairy cows had been infected. While cattle hadn’t died from the disease, sea lions in Antarctica had, Brooks said.
Free range farming operations were particularly at risk. Birds roaming outside, sharing outdoor water sources were prone. While in the past the disease might have been on trucks or on people, it was now on wild birds and if you’re a free range farmer how do you stop wild birds?
In places like the UK, free range farmers were allowed to keep their birds in sheds for three or four months during the highest risk times, without jeopardy to their free range status, Brookes said.
Counterproductive to the Australian problem was the pressure that had previously been put on chicken farmers by Government to create dams on their land to ensure there was water during dry spells. However, that had encouraged ducks, which had brought avian influenza. By contrast, anything that lured wild birds was something New Zealand’s industry had always strongly discouraged, Brooks said. Studies have shown mallard ducks would also be a key carrier of the disease here.
Brooks confirmed there was no risk to humans from eating cooked birds with avian flu. The disease was brutal, symptoms were obvious, and birds succumbed quickly so it was unlikely any infected birds would make it to slaughter. And, the virus would be killed by cooking anyway, Brooks said.
Meanwhile, Biosecurity New Zealand and the Department of Conservation (DoC) were also undertaking preparedness work, including detection surveillance and monitoring around New Zealand and in the sub-Antarctic area.
According to DoC’s website, a vaccine trial was under way to protect the country’s most endangered native birds. As it wasn’t possible to vaccinate all our endangered birds, a focus was on threatened species that were reliant on captive breeding or intensive management for species survival.
A safety and efficacy trial was being carried out on small numbers of five native bird species including kakī (black stilt), takahē, kākāpō, tūturuatu (shore plover) and the red-crowned kākāriki (as a surrogate species for kākāriki karaka/orange-fronted kākāriki).
MPI approved the vaccine trial, which was being conducted by DoC veterinarians under strictly controlled conditions. The vaccine being used contained inactivated (dead) virus, meaning it couldn’t cause infections with avian influenza.
The MPI said it had strong systems in place to ensure early detection if HPAI did arrive.
“The likelihood of the introduction of HPAI H5N1 through human introduction on pathways that we manage is low. As information emerges about the distribution of the disease in Antarctica, there will be a better understanding about the likelihood of it reaching New Zealand through wild bird movements.”
Sarah Curtis is a news reporter for the Northern Advocate, focusing on a wide range of issues. She has nearly 20 years’ experience in journalism, much of which she spent court reporting. She is passionate about covering stories that make a difference.