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Bird Flu: Industrial Poultry Production in Crisis

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Monday, June 22, 2015   

SIOUX FALLS, S. D. – The outbreak of avian influenza that has decimated hundreds of turkey and chicken operations in more than a dozen states was a surprise to many, but one expert says it was destined to happen.

Rob Wallace has served as a consultant for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on avian influenza and is currently a visiting scholar at the University of Minnesota's Institute for Global Studies.

He calls the production model in the commercial poultry industry a prime target for these types of outbreaks, and says it must be changed to take into account that the birds grown are embedded into an ecology.

"When you organize mono-cultures of poultry, 50,000 birds in a barn, that is all just food for influenza," Wallace says. "And if you develop diverse strains and stock of birds, that will provide the immunological diversity necessary to resist any pathogen that comes through."

According to Wallace, another key to preventing such outbreaks is through the restoration of wetlands, which would help keep infected wild birds from intermingling with commercial poultry flocks.

While the number of new cases of avian influenza in the region appears to be waning, Wallace says it is cyclical in nature so he expects to see an increase again in the fall and winter. He also notes there is a possible danger to human health, as the CDC recently warned.

"Now, I'm not saying it's going to happen, because there are plenty of avian influenzas that have emerged and have not gone human-to-human," says Wallace. "However, there are many examples in which that has indeed happened within the last ten years."

Millions of chickens and turkeys have been destroyed in an effort to contain the spread of the disease.





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