Bird flu paranoia?

Bird flu paranoia in Victoria, Australia may start causing egg shortages. The story is that wild birds are the vectors.


  • In short: Egg shortages could be felt over the coming week after four egg farms go into quarantine.
  • More than 600,000 egg-laying hens will be culled to contain avian influenza outbreaks.
  • What's next? Shoppers who cannot find their favourite eggs should shop around at local grocers and butchers, farmers say.
Egg producers are warning shoppers of a potential shortage from this week as bird flu outbreaks affect production in Victoria.

Four farms in Victoria's largest egg-producing regions are under quarantine after confirmed outbreaks of two different strains of the virus, also known as avian influenza.

More than 600,000 egg-laying hens at those farms will be culled in an effort to limit the spread of the virus.

There are more than 21 million hens in the national egg flock, according to the egg industry, and more than 100 egg farms in Victoria.

Victorian egg producer and Egg Farmers of Australia state director Meg Parkinson said any supply shortages would have been felt by now, as the 400,000-hen farm at Meredith that first reported an outbreak was affected more than two weeks ago.

"There are plenty of eggs in the system, but there won't be as many eggs as before," Ms Parkinson said.

Ms Parkinson understands the affected egg farms supply Australia's major supermarkets.

Fourth poultry farm placed in quarantine​

On Wednesday Agriculture Victoria advised that avian influenza had been detected at a fourth property in the Golden Plains Shire.

The farm has been placed into quarantine and Agriculture Victoria staff are working closely with industry to reduce the risk of spread.

Victoria's chief veterinary officer Graeme Cooke said the detection was not unexpected.

"We remind bird owners that housing birds, where practical, is an effective method of minimising direct contact with wild birds," Dr Cooke said.

Existing movement controls remain in place in designated areas near Terang.

The restricted and control areas around Meredith have been extended with a buffer zone covering a 15-kilometre radius.

'Shop around', farmers say​

While the impact on egg availability is yet to be felt, the industry is concerned about potential wider outbreaks of bird flu.

Victoria is Australia's third-largest egg producer, supplying 85 million dozen eggs each year.

New South Wales and Queensland produce 266 million dozen eggs combined.

The Victorian Farmers Federation says biosecurity is the top priority right now for poultry farmers, who have been advised to keep hens indoors and strengthen farm hygiene.

This will likely have the opposite effect.

The farming group's vice-president Danyel Cucinotta said egg availability would likely differ between retail outlets.

"We're anticipating a flow-on impact to egg supplies in the coming week and are working as hard as possible to maintain availability," Ms Cucinotta said.

"My advice is to shop around at your local grocer, market, or small independent store to buy your eggs."

The bird flu scam will likely be spread 'just as bird migration starts' and as the normal flu season hits. Both real human cases, caused by vaccination, and fake ones caused by PCR testing may be used to manufacture a fear-based narrative to lock everything down in time for Kamala to profit from another stolen election.


The sheer scale of the U.S. bird flu outbreak is hard to fathom.


More than 100 million farmed birds have been infected with H5N1 since 2022, followed by roughly 170 herds of dairy cows, along with virus detections in more than 200 other mammals — humans included.

Colorado is now facing the country's first human outbreak, which has quickly hit the double-digits. As of Wednesday, there have been nine recent cases at two poultry farms, plus one earlier case from a dairy farm. And while the latest spread may be chicken-to-human, genetic sequencing suggests the virus strain is similar to the form of bird flu tearing through cow populations across more than a dozen states.

The country's total human infection tally pales in comparison to the staggering case counts among poultry and livestock. There haven't been any farm worker deaths, and no cases linked to dairy farms have popped up yet in Canada, either.

Yet this new, unusual cluster of human H5N1 cases may be a harbinger of looming challenges to come, all while the broader U.S. outbreak could be surging out of control.

The timing is far from ideal, several scientists told CBC News, with farm worker infections ticking up mere months before the return of the usual flu season, and the fall migration of millions of wild birds — giving this globetrotting virus countless more opportunities to evolve.

So I guess we can blame wild birds, and also any case of the regular flu this season may trigger a PCR test, which could easily determine any illness to be this new H5N1. Edit: or H5N8, H9N2, whatever number 'it' is.

"We are looking at, potentially, a huge outbreak that is still expanding, and still growing, and that is not containable," warned virologist Angela Rasmussen, a researcher with the University of Saskatchewan's Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization.

"And that increases the risk of more and more human cases, which in turn increases the risk that this virus will become better adapted to humans."

Mild infections, no onward transmission​

Officials first announced the discovery of several farm worker infections back on July 14, all linked to large-scale culling efforts involving H5N1-infected birds on an egg farm in Colorado.

Were they PCR tested?

While there aren't signs of onward human-to-human transmission, sequencing from one of those cases showed the strain is closely related to the virus spreading in dairy cows, which features previously-documented adaptations to mammals, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention noted in a recent update.

More reassuring? So far, all the human cases in the U.S. have been mild infections, despite high H5N1 case fatality rates reported globally over the last two decades. Some farm workers in the Colorado cluster had traditional flu symptoms of fever and cough, while others experienced conjunctivitis, suggesting the virus may have snuck in through their exposed eye membranes rather than through the body's respiratory channels.

Hmm... so we'll need eye masks?

But given the small number of known human infections in the U.S. to date, and the unusual transmission patterns that don't mimic how this virus would actually spread person-to-person, "we should put no stock at all on what we're seeing in terms of severity," noted McMaster University influenza researcher Matthew Miller, the director of the Michael G. DeGroote Institute for Infectious Disease Research.


More than 100 million farmed birds have been infected with H5N1 since 2022, followed by roughly 170 herds of dairy cows across 13 states just this year. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Virus mashup 'could create a whole new beast'​

If human infections keep rising into the fall, in Colorado or beyond, experts say the timing would be advantageous to a virus that's already proven quite adept at striking a wide variety of species. And a host of factors, several scientists agreed, may provide opportunities for H5N1 to better adapt to infect and harm more human hosts.

For one thing, the dovetailing of heightened human H5N1 circulation and the return of seasonal flu strains could have dire consequences, said virologist Tom Peacock, a fellow with the Pirbright Institute, a U.K.-based research and surveillance centre for zoonotic viruses.

"Suddenly, some of these workers who are getting exposed and infected [with H5N1] have a chance of being infected with seasonal flu. And then the poultry or dairy worker is acting as the mixing vessel."

Those scenarios would give the virus a chance to mash up its genetic makeup with other flu strains, potentially allowing it to mix-and-match characteristics that could sharpen its ability to transmit person-to-person. It's a process known as reassortment, and influenza viruses are particularly adept at it.

That genetic reassortment, Miller said, "could create a whole new beast."

There's also a heightened risk of other farms becoming infection sites in the months ahead, Peacock warned, given H5N1's penchant for spilling between species.

Already, mounting evidence suggests heightened mammal-to-mammal transmission is taking place even now. A peer-reviewed paper in Nature, published online Wednesday, looked at genomic sequencing for a host of infected species, including cows, birds, domestic cats and a raccoon from impacted farms.

The study in Nature shows two tables of PCR testing. Not sure if they are the high-cycle PCR testing that found covid in everything.

The research team found evidence of both "multidirectional interspecies transmissions" and "efficient cow-to-cow transmission" after seemingly healthy cows from an affected farm were transported to a facility in a different state.

The possibility of onward spread into pig populations in the months ahead is one of Peacock's biggest concerns, since swine "have a lot of viruses circulating within them that are derived originally from human seasonal viruses."

"This is how pandemics happen: The mixing of seasonal viruses with avian viruses or novel viruses," he said.

The 2009 swine flu pandemic is one of the most familiar, resulting from a mashup of bird, pig and human forms of influenza A.

It wasn't a pandemic.


Chickens are pictured at a large poultry farm in British Columbia. Both in Canada and the U.S., wild and farmed birds have fallen ill with H5N1 in droves in recent years. (Ben Nelms/CBC)
Miller agreed the possibility of that happening on U.S. pig farms is a rising threat. "We're not doing enough proactive surveillance in those settings right now," he added. "It's a little frustrating."

On top of that, scientists expect another wave of migrations could further fuel H5N1's global spread, with millions of wild birds set to fly along north-south avian superhighways in the months ahead.

"There are tremendous opportunities [for H5N1] to recombine in new and unexpected ways as these waves of migration take place," Miller said.

Human spread remains hazy​

All those added variables could make the U.S. bird flu outbreak even tougher to contain, heightening the risk to humans and putting other countries — including Canada — on alert.

"Eventually, if this continues, we will have viruses emerging that are better adapted to humans. What that's going to look like in practice, and whether that causes a pandemic, we don't know," said Rasmussen.

Complicating matters? The full extent of H5N1's human spread in the U.S. still remains hazy.

A recent serology study in Michigan, which involved testing blood samples from 35 farm workers who'd spent time around infected dairy cows, didn't find evidence of prior infections — suggesting there might not be symptomless human infections flying under the radar.

But it's just one small study, from just one health department.


Just days after early reports of sick cows at several U.S. farms, H5N1 bird flu has been identified in at least a dozen herds across six states. Scientists are on high alert. But many say what worries them more is whether this virus will jump to more livestock — and pigs, in particular. (Ohio Department of Agriculture)

Colorado, meanwhile, is ramping up surveillance efforts to combat the rampant spread of the virus, including a mandatory order on Tuesday for weekly bulk milk-tank testing at dairy farms. Two days later, the state announced the launch of a publicly-available dashboard to track cases of avian flu in humans, which will be updated twice a week.

Yet data from other states remains thin thanks to patchwork testing efforts mired by bureaucratic roadblocks, which means the U.S. is likely missing both animal and human cases, experts have warned for months.

"It's really hard to tell if Colorado was genuinely in a worse state than a lot of other states, or it's just testing and finding stuff," said Peacock. "This is one of the major issues with this outbreak: We don't really have any idea."

Calls for farm worker vaccinations​

Meanwhile, Rasmussen says there's "not really clear decisive action being taken" to clamp down on animal or human infections.

Alongside the need for heightened testing and surveillance efforts, she said H5N1 vaccination strategies targeting at-risk farm workers are another tool the U.S. should consider before the situation spirals out of control.

So far, however, the CDC has not recommended vaccinations for any livestock workers.

Canada, Rasmussen said, should also remain vigilant, despite no known farm worker infections or any signs of the virus appearing in the country's milk supply. (Only one human case of H5N1 has ever been reported in Canada. The individual died from bird flu back in 2014 following a trip to China, where they likely got infected.)


20 years of avian flu making headlines and sparking pandemic concerns​


2 months ago
Duration1:43
A look at CBC News coverage of H5N1’s spread across the globe between 2004 and 2024, from early bird flu outbreaks in Asia to the ongoing spread of the virus in dairy cows.
Other countries are taking a different approach. In late June, Finland became the first to pursue proactive bird flu vaccination for any adults "who are at increased risk of contracting avian influenza due to their work or other circumstances."

The U.S. should take note, Rasmussen said, as sweltering temperatures in Colorado limited workers' ability to wear protective equipment while they were killing infected poultry — leaving them vulnerable to catching the virus.

With more hot months ahead, and untold numbers of virus-carrying farm animals across the country, that scenario could easily happen again.

"It's a mistake not to offer some limited vaccination," Rasmussen said. "Especially given the current situation."

But there's the tradeoff between virulence and transmissibility that would naturally prevent this from becoming a pandemic. From the above Mercola article:

Others, such as evolutionary biologist Paul Ewald, (5) claim that a pandemic of this sort simply cannot happen, because in order for it to occur, the world has to change. Not the virus itself, but the world.

In a previous interview for Esquire magazine, in which he discusses the possibility of a bird flu pandemic, he states:

"They think that if a virus mutates, it's an evolutionary event. Well, the virus is mutating because that is what viruses and other pathogens do. But evolution is not just random mutation. It is random mutation coupled with natural selection; it is a battle for competitive advantage among different strains generated by random mutation.

For bird flu to evolve into a human pandemic, the strain that finds a home in humanity has to be a strain that is both highly virulent and highly transmissible. Deadliness has to translate somehow into popularity; H5N1 has to find a way to kill or immobilize its human hosts, and still find other hosts to infect. Usually that doesn't happen."

Ewald goes on to explain that evolution in general is all about trade-offs, and in the evolution of infections the trade-off is between virulence and transmissibility.

What this means is that in order for a "bird flu" or "swine flu" to turn into a human pandemic, it has to find an environment that favors both deadly virulence and ease of transmission.

People living in squalor on the Western Front at the end of World War I generated such an environment, from which the epidemic of 1918 could arise.

Likewise, crowded chicken farms, slaughterhouses, and jam-packed markets of eastern Asia provide another such environment, and that environment gave rise to the bird flu -- a pathogen that both kills and spreads, in birds, but not in humans.

Says Ewald:

"We know that H5N1 is well adapted to birds. We also know that it has a hard time becoming a virus that can move from person to person. It has a hard time without our doing anything. But we can make it harder. We can make sure it has no human population in which to evolve transmissibility. There is no need to rely on the mass extermination of chickens. There is no need to stockpile vaccines for everyone.

By vaccinating just the people most at risk -- the people who work with chickens and the caregivers -- we can prevent it from becoming transmissible among humans. Then it doesn't matter what it does in chickens."

Please remember that, despite the fantastic headlines and projections of MILLIONS of deaths, the H5N1 bird flu virus killed a mere 257 people worldwide since late 2003. As unfortunate as those deaths are, 257 deaths worldwide from any disease, over the course of five years, simply does not constitute an emergency worthy of much attention, let alone fear!

No real sign of any major outbreak in the Asia-Pacific, despite dire warnings for them to 'get on board':


No sign of an outbreak in Russia, either.
 
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