New Bird Flu Outbreaks Reported in Germany, Switzerland, Austria

NETHERLANDS-ANIMALS-AGRICULTURE-HEALTH-BIRD-FLU
Chicken are pictured lock in a poultry farm in Bergentheim November 10, 2016 following the discovery of bird flu among wild birds in Europe. Poultry farmers in The Netherlands have been ordered to lock up their flocks, after a dangerous variant of the bird flu (H5N8 strain) is spreading across Germany and other European countries. According to the state of Schleswig-Holstein, dead wild birds were also reported at Lake Constance in Baden-Wuerttemberg, Switzerland and Austria. / AFP / ANP / Vincent Jannink / Netherlands OUT (Photo credit should read VINCENT JANNINK/AFP/Getty Images)
VINCENT JANNINK AFP/Getty Images

Germany, Switzerland and Austria reported new outbreaks of a severe strain of bird flu on Saturday in the latest in a series of cases across Europe.

The H5N8 virus has also been found in Hungary, Poland, the Netherlands, Denmark and Croatia.

In Germany, the state of Schleswig-Holstein reported one case of bird flu confirmed at a farm where 30,000 chickens would now be culled. The state’s agriculture ministry said an area of 3 square km (1.2 square miles) had been sealed off.

In Berlin, the federal agriculture minister, Christian Schmidt, said the government had set up a crisis management desk.

The Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety confirmed a second outbreak at a chicken farm in its western Vorarlberg province close to the German and Swiss borders and said 4,000 would be culled.

An Austrian poultry farm close to the chicken farm had tested positive for H5N8 on Friday.

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A protection zone with a radius of at least 3 km and a surveillance zone with a radius of at least 10 km around the infected holdings will be created to keep migrating birds from transmitting the disease to farm poultry.

Bird flu was also confirmed in dead birds along Lake Geneva in Switzerland on Saturday.

Austria and Switzerland earlier this week took steps to prevent the spread of the virus to domestic poultry after discovering the disease in wild ducks around Lake Constance.

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