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H5H1 HPAI Lesser Scaup Leon County Florida


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Case confirmed in Tallahassee duck

On Feb. 25, a woman on her morning commute to work noticed a duck in the middle of Georgia Street in Tallahassee. She stopped to check on it. Apparently injured, it did not fly away.

She was able to capture it and take it to nearby Northwood Animal Hospital. St. Francis Wildlife picked it up from there; admitted the bird, a lesser scaup, to our wildlife hospital; and began treatment for its injured leg.

When we were alerted that migratory birds may be carrying the very contagious virus as they flew back to their summer breeding territory — and we were on a flyway, our wildlife rehabilitator swabbed the duck and sent the sample to a Florida lab.

https://www.tallahassee.com/story/life/home-garden/2022/03/22/highly-pathogenic-avian-influenza-forces-st-francis-wildlife-stop-taking-birds-tallahassee-duck-case/9456416002/

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After avian flu confirmed in Tallahassee, St. Francis Wildlife stops accepting wild birds | Beck

Sandy Beck
Guest columnist
 

Because of the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI), our local wildlife rehabilitation center, St. Francis Wildlife, temporarily will not accept injured, orphaned or sick wild birds. HPAI has just been confirmed in a duck that was brought to St. Francis Wildlife in Quincy, Florida.

Confirmed and presumptive cases of HPAI have recently been documented along the East Coast of Florida from Palm Beach County to Duval County and on the West Coast in Charlotte County.

Infected birds have been aquatic species (ducks, gulls, herons, terns and pelicans), raptors (great horned owls and bald eagles) and scavengers (vultures). Birds on their northern spring migration may have carried the virus into our area.

Last year, the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza traveled from Europe into Canada. Then migratory waterfowl carried it down the Atlantic Flyway, infecting birds along the way.

Lesser Scaup ducks, like these, appear to be one of the species most susceptible to this HPAI bird flu, according to the Fish & Wildlife Research Institute.
 

An unprecedented outbreak

Two months ago, on Jan. 22, when a hunter showed up at a boat ramp in Palm Beach County with two blue-winged teal ducks, a USDA-Wildlife Services employee swabbed them. No one suspected the birds were sick; it was just routine surveillance. Their tests were positive for HPAI.

In February, dozens of dead lesser scaup ducks and other aquatic species, as well as birds that scarfed up those free meals — black vultures, bald eagles and great horned owls — were identified along Florida’s east coast and in Charlotte County with this extremely infectious new bird flu. It was reported that wildlife officials suspect there are "hundreds more" unconfirmed cases.

Some infected birds may be asymptomatic while others appear lethargic or show neurologic symptoms such as circling, tremors and seizures. Often birds are found dead with no signs of trauma or other causes.

This current outbreak of HPAI in Florida’s wild birds is unprecedented. And also extremely unsettling for Florida’s wildlife rehabilitators who care for thousands of injured, orphaned and sick wild animals every year but never experienced anything like this.

On March 21, the USDA confirmed the presence of HPAI in a male lesser scaup brought to St. Francis Wildlife with an injured leg.
 

Case confirmed in Tallahassee duck

On Feb. 25, a woman on her morning commute to work noticed a duck in the middle of Georgia Street in Tallahassee. She stopped to check on it. Apparently injured, it did not fly away.

She was able to capture it and take it to nearby Northwood Animal Hospital. St. Francis Wildlife picked it up from there; admitted the bird, a lesser scaup, to our wildlife hospital; and began treatment for its injured leg.

When we were alerted that migratory birds may be carrying the very contagious virus as they flew back to their summer breeding territory — and we were on a flyway, our wildlife rehabilitator swabbed the duck and sent the sample to a Florida lab.

Aquatic birds, such as these lesser scaups and redheads, have tested positive for the very contagious HPAI along Florida's coasts.
 

St. Francis is temporarily not accepting wild birds 

Because HPAI is highly contagious and untreatable, St. Francis Wildlife and our two Tallahassee veterinary partners, Northwood and Allied Veterinary Hospitals, are temporarily not accepting any wild birds.

In 44 years, we’ve never turned away an injured, orphaned or sick wild animal, so we are deeply upset to be unable to help local birds in need at this time. But we must do all we can to help control this serious outbreak.

After avian flu confirmed in Tallahassee, St. Francis Wildlife stops accepting wild birds | Beck

Sandy Beck
Guest columnist
 

Because of the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI), our local wildlife rehabilitation center, St. Francis Wildlife, temporarily will not accept injured, orphaned or sick wild birds. HPAI has just been confirmed in a duck that was brought to St. Francis Wildlife in Quincy, Florida.

Confirmed and presumptive cases of HPAI have recently been documented along the East Coast of Florida from Palm Beach County to Duval County and on the West Coast in Charlotte County.

Infected birds have been aquatic species (ducks, gulls, herons, terns and pelicans), raptors (great horned owls and bald eagles) and scavengers (vultures). Birds on their northern spring migration may have carried the virus into our area.

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Last year, the Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza traveled from Europe into Canada. Then migratory waterfowl carried it down the Atlantic Flyway, infecting birds along the way.

Lesser Scaup ducks, like these, appear to be one of the species most susceptible to this HPAI bird flu, according to the Fish & Wildlife Research Institute.
 

An unprecedented outbreak

Two months ago, on Jan. 22, when a hunter showed up at a boat ramp in Palm Beach County with two blue-winged teal ducks, a USDA-Wildlife Services employee swabbed them. No one suspected the birds were sick; it was just routine surveillance. Their tests were positive for HPAI.

In February, dozens of dead lesser scaup ducks and other aquatic species, as well as birds that scarfed up those free meals — black vultures, bald eagles and great horned owls — were identified along Florida’s east coast and in Charlotte County with this extremely infectious new bird flu. It was reported that wildlife officials suspect there are "hundreds more" unconfirmed cases.

Some infected birds may be asymptomatic while others appear lethargic or show neurologic symptoms such as circling, tremors and seizures. Often birds are found dead with no signs of trauma or other causes.

This current outbreak of HPAI in Florida’s wild birds is unprecedented. And also extremely unsettling for Florida’s wildlife rehabilitators who care for thousands of injured, orphaned and sick wild animals every year but never experienced anything like this.

On March 21, the USDA confirmed the presence of HPAI in a male lesser scaup brought to St. Francis Wildlife with an injured leg.
 

Case confirmed in Tallahassee duck

On Feb. 25, a woman on her morning commute to work noticed a duck in the middle of Georgia Street in Tallahassee. She stopped to check on it. Apparently injured, it did not fly away.

She was able to capture it and take it to nearby Northwood Animal Hospital. St. Francis Wildlife picked it up from there; admitted the bird, a lesser scaup, to our wildlife hospital; and began treatment for its injured leg.

When we were alerted that migratory birds may be carrying the very contagious virus as they flew back to their summer breeding territory — and we were on a flyway, our wildlife rehabilitator swabbed the duck and sent the sample to a Florida lab.

Aquatic birds, such as these lesser scaups and redheads, have tested positive for the very contagious HPAI along Florida's coasts.
 

St. Francis is temporarily not accepting wild birds 

Because HPAI is highly contagious and untreatable, St. Francis Wildlife and our two Tallahassee veterinary partners, Northwood and Allied Veterinary Hospitals, are temporarily not accepting any wild birds.

In 44 years, we’ve never turned away an injured, orphaned or sick wild animal, so we are deeply upset to be unable to help local birds in need at this time. But we must do all we can to help control this serious outbreak.

If you find a wild bird in need of assistance, call FWC Dispatch: 850-245-7716 or FWC 24-hour hotline: 888-404-3922. To prevent the spread of HPAI, do not handle a sick or dead bird, keep pets away and report it to FWC immediately so it can be tested for HPAI. Visit app.myfwc.com/FWRI/AvianMortality/.

This virus can spread through direct contact with infected birds or a contaminated surface, on which it can remain active for a long time.

All current avian patients at St. Francis Wildlife are being tested, every surface is being disinfected and protocols for dealing with this first-of-its-kind outbreak in Florida are being prepared with the assistance of state and national wildlife experts.

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