|
 China's chief veterinary officer
with the Ministry of Agriculture, Jia Youling, displays Friday October 28
a map showing migrations routes for wild birds that have been found to
carry bird flu. [AP] | BEIJING, Nov. 4 (Xinhuanet)
-- An outbreak of avian flu was reported in northeast China's Liaoning Province,
where 8,940 chickens died of the deadly disease, the Ministry of Agriculture
said on Friday.
The epidemic broke out on October 26 as chickens were
found dead on family farms in a village in Badaohao town of Heishan county, the
ministry said.
The deaths were reported to the Liaoning Provincial
Animal Health Supervision Administration, which drew conclusion on November 1
that they were suspected of contracting avian flu.
Sample of the dead chickens were sent to China's
National Avian Flu Reference Laboratory for confirmation, and the laboratory
confirmed on November 3 the virus was the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu.
The bird flu broke out in six towns in Heishan county
which is located on the East Asia-Australia route where migratory birds used to
move. More than 20 magpies and other wild birds were found dead there, the
ministry said.
Experts believe this outbreak may have been caused by
migratory birds, it said.
A total of 369,900 family birds within a radius of
three km have been culled and 13.9 million have been vaccinated, the ministry
said.
Agriculture Minister Du Qinglin, together with a team
of experts, is on his way to the areas hit by the disease.
No human deaths have been reported in the Heishan
outbreak. Enditem |