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BEIJING, March 3 -- Bird flu has been ruled out as
the cause of death of 8,000 chicks at two chicken farms in Guangzhou, capital of
Guangdong Province.
Examinations and laboratory tests showed the chicks
died from a parasitic disease.
Another 3,000 chicks in the two farms have been slaughtered to prevent the disease from further
spreading in the city, according to Zhang Yenong, the owner of the two sites,
yesterday.
Zhang learnt the examination findings from
Guangzhou's Baiyun District Bureau of Agriculture on Tuesday. His chicks tested
negative for the H5N1 virus.
"My chicken farms have also been sterilized by
special personnel from the city's agricultural departments in the past two
days," Zhang said.
He has been compensated with a total of 8,000 yuan
(US$1,000) by local government after his chicks were slaughtered.
Zhang, a farmer from Chendong Village in Zhongluotan
Township in Guangzhou's Baiyun District, purchased 11,000 chicks in late
January, but some began dying from the middle of last month.
"Towards the end of the month, 100 chicks were dying
every day," said Zhang, who has been raising chickens for more than 15 years.
But he now plans to give up raising chicks for the moment.
The large number of chicks that suddenly died raised
great concern from local relevant government departments amid fears of a bird
flu outbreak.
A special task force was immediately established and
arrived at Zhang's chicken farms to conduct dissecting examinations on site and
take samples for further laboratory tests earlier this week.
It determined they died of coccidiosis, a common
parasitical disease in poultry across the world.
According to sources from Guangdong Provincial Bureau
of Agriculture, Guangdong has remained free of H5N1 bird flu thanks to the
strict prevention and inspection measures that local governments had introduced
in the past months.
The southern province, which borders Hong Kong and
Macao special administrative regions, has the country's largest number of
chicken farms.
The province is currently selling more than 20,000
live chickens to Hong Kong a day.
(Source: China Daily) |