Tests: Pigeons don't pose bird flu trouble
JOHN HEILPRIN
Associated Press Posted on
"Pigeons aren't a big worry," said Rex Sohn, a wildlife disease specialist at the U.S. Geological
Survey's
Government scientists looking for the first signs of the
H5N1 bird flu strain in the
In February, a 14-year-old pigeon seller in
There have been no pigeon die-offs in parts of the world
experiencing H5N1 outbreaks, according to USGS wildlife disease specialist
Grace McLaughlin.
Three studies since the late 1990s by the Agriculture
Department's Southeast Poultry Research Laboratory in
In one experiment, researchers squirted into pigeons' mouths
liquid drops that contained the highly pathogenic H5N1 virus from a
In 2004, the lab did two more experiments. Using a pigeon
and a crow that had both died in
"What that tells us is that pigeons can be susceptible.
But they're not uniformly susceptible," Swayne
said. "Not like chickens or ducks - they all become infected."
Infected pigeons carried the virus about 10 days. But they
were infectious for only about two days and then at levels below what it would
normally take to infect a chicken.
"The experimental data is not very strong that pigeons
are going to be spreading this virus around," Swayne
said. "At this point they have not been implicated in spreading it to
humans and to farms."
ON THE NET
Agricultural Research Service: http://www.ars.usda.gov/main