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JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

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  • JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

    Hat-tip, Brendi!

    Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu
    02/16/2007

    THE ASAHI SHIMBUN

    Scientists suspect rats spread the recent outbreaks of avian flu at four farms in Miyazaki and Okayama prefectures after the H5N1 virus strain was brought over by migratory birds from China.

    The experts agree that the migratory birds triggered the infections at the four poultry farms over the past month. But they said at a meeting Wednesday that the way the disease spread indicates that other factors were involved.

    Inspectors found that nets and coverings were in place to prevent large migratory birds from coming into contact with the poultry.

    In addition, dead chickens at three of the farms were found in areas farthest from the entrance of the coops, so the wild birds were not likely the direct source of the infection.

    "It's possible that small rodents, such as rats, carried the virus into the chicken coops," said Toshihiro Ito, a professor of veterinary microbiology at Tottori University who chairs the team of specialists.

    He said the rats were likely infected by the wild birds from China.

    The task force, appointed by the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, said the H5N1 strain at the four farms was identical to the one that killed thousands of wild birds at Qinghai Lake in western China starting in 2005.

    The strain was also similar to one found in duck droppings in South Korea in January.


    "It is possible the virus was brought to western Japan by a route that went through China and the Korean Peninsula," Koichi Otsuki, a professor of veterinary microbiology at Kyoto Sangyo University, said.

    According to specialists, migratory birds follow three main routes in winter. One route passes over Hokkaido, another crosses the Sea of Japan and the third goes through the Korean Peninsula.

    Ducks are believed the likely carriers of avian flu because most ducks are not affected by the disease.

    However, the avian flu virus multiplies in the intestines of ducks and is released in their droppings.

    An Environment Ministry study confirmed that wild ducks were within a 10-kilometer radius of the infected farms in Japan.

    Nets and other measures at the farms in Japan should have been enough to keep out large wild birds, like ducks, but rats and small birds could still enter the coops.

    If the specialists confirm that rats were indeed the carriers of avian flu, it would be very difficult to avoid similar outbreaks.

    "While it is necessary to prevent intrusion, it is also important to strengthen the resistance of poultry by reducing stress on the birds and improving ventilation (in the coops) to diffuse and inactivate the virus," said Hiroshi Kida, a professor of veterinary microbiology at Hokkaido University.

    As to whether the virus might mutate into one that affects humans, Nobuhiko Okabe, director of the Infectious Disease Surveillance Center of the National Institute of Infectious Diseases, said, "While there is no need to become overly concerned, we also cannot let our guard down."

    He said early discovery and culling of infected poultry should keep the possibility low of mutations in Japan. (IHT/Asahi: February 16,2007)

    The Asahi Shimbun is widely regarded for its journalism as the most respected daily newspaper in Japan. The English version offers selected articles from the vernacular Asahi Shimbun, as well as extensive coverage of cool Japan,focusing on manga, travel and other timely news
    ...when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. - Sherlock Holmes

  • #2
    Re: JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

    There were lots of dead mice found in the area of the bf outbreak around Uvs Nuur lake in Tuva, Russia (& Mongolia) in July of 2006:



    Enough dead mice to make the Russian researchers comment on it. I wonder if they ever tested the mice?
    ...when you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. - Sherlock Holmes

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

      I wonder if they ever tested the mice?
      How long have we been asking that question now?

      I've never noticed any rodents other than lab rodents are in Dr. Niman's travel logs.

      .
      "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

        Thanks Brendi.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

          Originally posted by AlaskaDenise View Post
          How long have we been asking that question now?

          I've never noticed any rodents other than lab rodents are in Dr. Niman's travel logs.

          .
          Ditto.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

            It doesn't say that they noticed dead rats or mice, and it doesn't say they trapped and tested mice or rats. It also says the rats/mice 'might' be the carriers. Sounds more like scapegoating. Give us hard data, or quit speculating.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

              Originally posted by wetDirt View Post
              It doesn't say that they noticed dead rats or mice, and it doesn't say they trapped and tested mice or rats. It also says the rats/mice 'might' be the carriers. Sounds more like scapegoating. Give us hard data, or quit speculating.
              My two cents on this....

              This and similar news stories were prompted by an official statement put out on February 14 by the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (fulltext in Japanese available here: http://www.maff.go.jp/www/press/2007...14press_3b.pdf )

              The official release does not, in my opinion, attempt to scapegoat, sidestep, or otherwise avoid directly addressing the salient issues. The report was generated by a team of specialists who were assembled with the specific task of establishing a preliminary position regarding possible routes of transmission. At this stage, they are relying primarily on observations of sequence data, knowledge of farm layout and activities, geographic and temporal proximity of outbreaks, etc. to generate a hypothesis. They acknowledge this and call for follow-up testing to try to corroborate the details.

              I don't see any problem with them issuing such a statement. They're just looking at the data available to them, doing their best to make sense of it, and suggesting further measures. They don't go out of their way to emphasize the possible role of rodents in the official release, they just mention it parenthetically after detailing why some other explanations strike them as problematic, given the few facts they do have.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: JAPAN - Rodents suspected in spread of avian flu

                Note the new report on the UK cases - they also implicate rodents as possible vectors.

                Poultry biosecurity information always implicates rodents as potential carriers of regular AI - H5N1 shouldn't be any different.

                .
                "The next major advancement in the health of American people will be determined by what the individual is willing to do for himself"-- John Knowles, Former President of the Rockefeller Foundation

                Comment

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