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Bird flu fells nearly 9,000 marine creatures in Chile

Thousands of sea lions have washed up dead on the beach in Chile
Thousands of sea lions have washed up dead on the beach in Chile.

Nearly 9,000 sea lions, penguins, otters and small cetaceans have died in an avian flu outbreak battering Chile's north coast, the South American country's fisheries service said Thursday.

Since the beginning of 2023, more than 7,600 , 1,186 Humboldt penguins—an that breeds only in Chile and Peru—and several otters, porpoises and dolphins have been found dead along the coast, the Sernapesca service said in a statement.

The disease was present in 12 of Chile's 16 regions, it added, and announced the activation of "surveillance protocols" along the coast, including burying affected animals in a bid to prevent further virus spread.

Since late 2021, one of the worst global avian influenza outbreaks on record has seen tens of millions of poultry culled, mass wild bird die-offs and a rising number of infections among mammals in several countries.

In Cambodia, an 11-year-old girl fell ill in mid-February with a fever, cough and , and died from the H5N1 bird flu virus, according to the health ministry there.

Her father also tested positive, but Cambodian health authorities ruled out human-to-human transmission.

It is rare that jumps over into mammals—and rarer still that humans catch the potentially deadly virus.

  • Officials in Chile are burying animals that died of bird flu in a bid to inhibit virus spread
    Officials in Chile are burying animals that died of bird flu in a bid to inhibit virus spread.
  • There is no treatment for bird flu
    There is no treatment for bird flu.

There is no treatment for the disease, which is often deadly in wild and domesticated birds.

In March, Chile signaled its first case of human infection, in a man aged 53.

Elsewhere in South America, Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Peru—with hundreds of sea lion deaths—have also reported cases.

© 2023 AFP

Citation: Bird flu fells nearly 9,000 marine creatures in Chile (2023, May 26) retrieved 21 May 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2023-05-bird-flu-fells-marine-creatures.html
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