Avian flu detected at 4th farm in Quebec's Eastern Townships - Action News
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Montreal

Avian flu detected at 4th farm in Quebec's Eastern Townships

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says the infected sites have all been placed under quarantine, and the agency is reminding other farms in the area to be cautiousand increase biosecurity.

Better biosecurity, help from general public can help reduce spread of virus, says chicken farmer

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is reminding other farms in the area to be cautiousand increase biosecurity. (Dimas Ardian/Getty Images)

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA)is reporting cases ofthe highly pathogenic H5N1 strain of avian influenza at yet another farm in Quebec's Eastern Townships the fourth such report in the past seven days.

The latest confirmed case of the virus was detected Sunday at a poultry farm inLes Sources, a regionalcounty municipality (MRC), about 190 kilometres east of Montreal.

Bird flu was also detected last week intheBrome-Missisquoi, Haut-Saint-Franois and Val-Saint-Franois regions.

Experts say thevirus can lead to extremely high mortality ratesamong flocks, either due to the virus itself or because they need to be euthanized after beingexposed.

Some 100,000 birds died at thepoultry farm inVal-Saint-Franoislast week.

The CFIA says the infected sites have all been placed under quarantine, and the agency is reminding other farms in the area to be cautiousand increase biosecurity.

Luce Blanger isa chicken farmerfrom Saint-Gabriel-de-Valcartier,a municipality in the Capitale-Nationale region, as well as a board member ofLes leveurs de volailles du Qubec, a Quebec poultry farmers' association.

Blanger says while she's somewhat concerned about the virus infiltrating her farm, she says taking the right precautions will likely keep it at bay.

"After learning about the first case, you know it's coming, you know it's inevitable. The migratory birds will pass overhead, so it's concerning and maybe a bit stressful,but I think if we apply our biosecurity, we should be fine."

Blanger says good biosecurity means preventing contact between the outside and inside worlds.

"We want to keep what's inside the barn inside the barn, and what's outside, outside."

WATCH | Poultry farmers explain how bird flu is affecting them:

Poultry farmers try to prevent avian flu spread

3 years ago
Duration 1:47
Canadian poultry farmers are trying to prevent the further spread of avian flu, which has already caused the loss of half a million birds this year, something that could further increase the price of chicken and turkey.

Objectscan transfer the disease, sochanging into a clean pair of clothing and boots before interacting with birds can mitigate the risk of spreading the virus,says Blanger.

She says the general public can also help by being on the lookout for dead birds.

"If there's dead birds on streets [...] you can call [Quebec's wildlife ministry] and they will analyze those birds, especially now in the migratory season,and they willknow if they're positive or not, so it will give us a good idea of how close we are to that virus."

The CFIA is reminding people that thevirusrarely infects humans but makes birds quite sick, causing anything from coughing and sneezing to erratic behaviour.

People cannot become infected by eating infected poultry, the agency says.

with files from Chlo Ranaldi