Atlanta, Jan 20 (AP) For the first time since the 2022 countrywide outbreak, bird flu hit a poultry producer in Georgia, the nation's top state for chicken production.
The state department of agriculture has announced that the agency has detected a case of 'Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza' at a commercial poultry producer in Elbert County, 165 km northeast of Atlanta.
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The agency subsequently suspended all poultry exhibitions, shows, swaps, meets and sales.
The virus has been detected four times in Georgia, but only in backyard flocks previously, including among 13 chickens and ducks earlier this month in Clayton County south of Atlanta.
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"This is a serious threat to Georgia's No. 1 industry and the livelihoods of thousands of Georgians who make their living in our state's poultry industry," Agriculture Commissioner Tyler Harper said in a news release.
The producer first noticed clinical signs of bird flu on Wednesday at the Elbert County location, according to the release.
The Georgia Poultry Laboratory Network confirmed a positive virus detection on Thursday afternoon, which the USDA's National Veterinary Services Laboratory also confirmed on Friday.
The site had about 45,000 broiler breeders when bird flu was detected.
The agriculture department's emergency management sent its state agricultural response teams on Friday to the site to "conduct depopulation, cleaning and disinfecting, and disposal operations".
All commercial poultry operations within a 10 km radius were put under quarantine and will undergo at least two weeks of surveillance testing.
Georgia Poultry Federation president Mike Giles said in a statement on Saturday that it is cooperating with state and federal officials and there are already testing processes in place to make sure all chicken products sold for consumption are safe to eat, local outlets reported.
"That approach to protecting the safety of poultry products produced in Georgia will continue throughout this response and beyond," Giles said.
A spokesperson for the agriculture department said it does not provide the name of an affected site when an animal disease breaks out to prevent any unauthorised access to the operation that could trigger a wider spread of the disease and to protect the farmer from harassment.
Bird flu has been spreading, killing millions of wild and domestic birds worldwide over the last two years, among other animals.
Nationwide, the virus has been detected in 84 commercial and backyard flocks in the last month, with 10.7 million birds on those sites, according to the latest online data released by the US Department of Agriculture.
It has also been confirmed in dozens of dairy farms.
While human cases are rare and are mostly found among farmworkers, one person has died from bird flu -- a Louisiana man over the age of 65 who was hospitalised with severe respiratory symptoms. (AP)
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