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For the past few months, Avian
Influenza has been in the news, and some of this news has
had a negative impact on the pigeon fancy. This is an
attempt to clarify and elaborate on some of that
information, especially as it relates to pigeons.
The news media abound with
fearful stories of some new and treacherous ‘Bird Flu’ that
will ‘kill us all’, (more precisely 150 million) in the
latest pandemic on the horizon, the worst since 1918. Ninety
nine percent of this is hype, intended to raise money for
the medical bureaucracy establishment and improve business
for drug companies and vaccine companies. With West Nile
fading fast over the horizon, the medical establishment
needs a new poster child, a dreadful disease that will
‘surely kill us all’ if we don’t continue to support their
capricious demands.
Some aspects of the current situation do raise concern,
but we are light years away from anything remotely
resembling a pandemic. In Asia, over the past few years,
there have been some cases of humans contracting Avian
Influenza from birds; the earliest of any notoriety was in
Hong Kong in 1997. This infection was a H5N1 type which did
indeed prove fatal in a few humans, but which did not infect
pigeons and couldn’t be transmitted by pigeons. (The ‘H’ and
‘N’ numbers are a technical way of characterizing the
Influenza virus used by scientists to distinguish one type
of Influenza virus from another; obviously if the numbers
are different in two separate outbreaks, so are the sources
of infection).
As times have gone on from there, human infections of
Avian Influenza have occasionally occurred in Asia; all of
these have been in situations where there has been extremely
close contact between humans and birds. In many of these
cases, the birds were chickens living in the same house as
the person infected, often in hygiene and sanitary
conditions far below contemporary American standards of
personal and household hygiene and sanitation. As these
people became ill, they were often diagnosed and treated
using local medical professionals and facilities which, in
some cases, are not comparable to American medical
standards. Under these conditions, the fatality rate of
Avian Influenza in humans in Asia has been about 50%.
In most of this, the culprit has been H5N1 type Avian
Influenza. This particular strain of the Influenza virus is
carried in wild waterfowl and shorebirds. In the past, this
virus has not caused disease in these birds, and, as these
birds migrate, they act as a wild reservoir for the disease,
spreading it along their migration flyways. Domestic birds
which come into contact with the virus spread in this manner
are likely to become infected, and many infected species are
likely to develop disease. With the relatively primitive
poultry husbandry practices used in many situations in Asia,
domestic poultry can easily become infected through exposure
in this manner.
Over the past few years, H5N1 itself has undergone some
changes. Just as pigeons are subject to the laws of
Genetics, so are viruses, and just as pigeon genes are
subject to genetic mutations, so are viral genes subject to
mutation. Influenza is an RNA virus, and such viruses tend
to have a relatively high rate of mutation. Once a mutation
has occurred, the persistence of that mutation is subject to
the selection forces in the environment; a favorable pigeon
mutation is selected for by the pigeon fancier to produce a
winning flier or a show winner. An unfavorable mutation is
selected against and culled. Viruses work similarly, but
with environmental forces doing the selection: virulent
viruses more effectively infect their host, and are spread
more efficiently. Less virulent viruses are outnumbered and
crowded out. Hence, without any opposition or control, a
virus would naturally tend to build up mutations enhancing
virulence and it would increase in virulence, propagating
more effectively within its host, transmitting more
efficiently to another susceptible host and, possibly, even
expanding its host range. On the contrary, a situation in
which the virus is not allowed to propagate widely would
obviously not be favorable for any of this, and establishing
a new viral mutation would be a very remote possibility.
This is exactly the situation with the H5N1 virus itself.
The H5N1 virus is found world wide, both in North America
and in Eurasia. Since the group of species of birds
inhabiting North America is distinct from the group of
species inhabiting Eurasia, these two groups of birds can be
thought of as separate, distinct populations. Also there is
very little contact between birds endemic to these two
areas; thus, these two populations of birds (American and
Eurasian) can be thought of as entirely distinct populations
of birds, each with its own unique environment. Also, in
each of these populations, the H5N1 virus experiences
entirely different selective forces, and hence we have
emerging two distinct strains of the H5N1 virus. Just as
there are different strains of racing pigeons (e.g. Sions vs
Jansens), there are emerging different strains of the H5N1
virus.
In particular, as we have seen above, in Asia, there has
been very little effective control over the H5N1 situation,
so it has propagated largely out of control, and hence
become a distinct, more virulent strain of the H5N1 virus;
thus the Eurasian strain of H5N1 has now been specifically
named ‘Asian H5N1 HPAI’. (The ‘HPAI’ stands for Highly
Pathogenic Avian Influenza). The Asian H5N1 HPAI strain
lives up to its name very well. It is pathogenic in its
natural hosts (waterfowl and shore birds) and, can still
infect humans, cause disease and even death. Unfortunately,
it has also extended its host range to now include pigeons.
This does not mean that pigeons have become its natural
host, but it now can infect pigeons and cause disease in
them. Pigeons are still insignificant players in the
Eurasian H5N1 scene, but they are now in the host range.
In contrast to the Eurasian situation, the American H5N1
remains well controlled. It has never had the opportunity to
become highly pathogenic, mainly because it has been stamped
out or controlled where ever it has been found. For foreign
trade as well as public health reasons, the United States
and Canada have always aggressively stamped out or tightly
controlled Avian Influenza (regardless of H and N types)
whenever it occurred. In this environment, it has not had
the opportunity to become highly pathogenic, hence the
American H5N1 is termed LPAI, Low Pathogenic Avian
Influenza. For this American H5N1 strain, the prior
experimental results would indicate that pigeons are largely
resistant. Notice that, as much as we dislike government
intrusion into our lives, both state and the federal
government play a major role in defining this environment,
especially keeping Avian Influenza from getting out of hand
as it has in Asia.
So where does this leave us ??? Obviously that depends
upon the geographic location. In the United States and
Canada, the situation is as it was before: the American H5N1
has low pathogenicity, and pigeons (and humans) don’t get
it. That doesn’t mean that we can become complacent and
forget about Avian Influenza; we still need to be very
vigilant and make sure that all Avian Influenza is well
controlled so that we don’t get into the situation we have
in Asia. In particular, let me reiterate a few precautionary
principles:
- Do NOT let your birds mix with migratory
birds, especially waterfowl or shorebirds. All wild
birds should be kept out of your loft and off your
premises. Do NOT feed wild birds around your pigeon
loft.
- Do NOT let your birds mix with any other domestic
poultry; galliformes and waterfowl can and do get Avian
Influenza, and could set up a situation similar to the
Asian situation, expanding the host range into pigeons.
Don’t let this happen.
- Do NOT allow your birds to mix with feral pigeons,
and do not allow feral pigeons into your loft.
- Avoid any and all contact with hogs, even indirect.
Hogs are the ‘mixing vessel’ to combine the Avian
Influenza strains with human adapted strains. Many of
the Avian Influenza cases I have seen in domestic
poultry have been associated with hogs.
- When training, keep birds under control, and do NOT
allow them to just sit around outside on the loft roof;
they should be either in the air or in the loft. Young
birds traveling to scout the territory is fine, as long
as they are flying. Except for settling, birds should
not just sit on the roof.
- Races and training flights should be arranged so
that the birds can make it home in a reasonable amount
of time. Do NOT release into bad weather, weather
‘fronts’, low atmospheric pressure, high winds, other
races crossing their flight path, etc.
- Do NOT import pigeons from Europe, except through
approved USDA quarantine stations. Since the Asian H5N1
HPAI can infect pigeons, we must be VERY CAUTIOUS with
anything from Europe. There are plenty of good birds
available domestically; it is no longer necessary to
import from Europe.
- In the case of an Avian Influenza break in any
species, keep yourself and your birds totally clear of
any contact, even indirect or incidental.
In the Asian situation, the strategy would be to keep
pigeons as a minor, incidental host. Pigeons are not a major
player in Asian H5N1 HPAI at this time; they are
insignificant at this point. Keep it that way. Do not allow
pigeons to become infected, and quickly destroy any that do
become infected. Monitor for Avian Influenza by whatever
means are available through your local Avian Lab or Avian
Vet; and vaccinate if a vaccine becomes available and is
approved. The above rules should also be observed, and
modified as necessary to fit the situation.
Avian Influenza is not a major problem in pigeons. With a
little bit of common sense and vigilance we can easily keep
it that way, and continue to enjoy our birds for a long time
to come.
Avian Influenza Update; Winter, 2005
Dr. Paul G. Miller PhD, DVM Page 1 2/25/2007
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