Book Reviews | Gordon Campbell | News Flashes | Scoop Features | Scoop Video | Strange & Bizarre | Search

 


Fish & Game keeps close eye on disease outbreak

Fish & Game keeps close eye on disease outbreak

Auckland Waikato Fish & Game is asking landowners and hunters to monitor waterfowl populations on their properties and ponds for any signs of sick or dead birds.

The call comes following Fish & Game being notified of an outbreak of avian botulism on an oxidation pond at Matamata which has killed an estimated 900 ducks.

Southern game bird manager David Klee says landowners and hunters in the area should check their ponds to ensure sick waterfowl have not dispersed from the site of the outbreak.

Symptoms include varying degrees of paralysis, sagging heads, drooping wings and flightlessness.

If landowners or hunters observe such signs they are asked to contact Auckland Waikato Fish & Game immediately (David Klee 021300183) for advice on how to deal with the situation.

“Unfortunately the authorities took six weeks to notify Fish & Game of this outbreak which is disappointing because by the time we were informed a large number of birds had already succumbed,” says Mr Klee.

“It is possible to manage outbreaks of avian botulism – removing dead birds and disposing of them in an appropriate manner is crucial – that’s why we’re asking hunters and landowners to be vigilant.”

Mr Klee says Fish & Game is actively working with local and territorial authorities by providing them with the relevant information on how to manage botulism and mitigate its impact.

Fish & Game wishes to thank local hunting club members (??) and Fish & Game councillors for assisting in the bird dispersal activity around the Matamata wastewater treatment plant where the outbreak occurred.

Key facts:

What is avian botulism?

It is a serious neuromuscular illness caused by a toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. Spores can lie dormant for many years in soil and other substrates until favourable environmental conditions leads to an outbreak. It has the potential to kill large numbers of waterfowl.

Is an outbreak common?

Avian botulism outbreaks often occur at wastewater treatment plant sites as these areas provide the perfect conditions for the bacterium which produces the toxin. Outbreaks typically coincide with periods of hot, dry and calm weather from December to March but can occur outside this period.

Is it a threat to human?

Avian botulism is different to the strain of botulism that affects humans.

ENDS

© Scoop Media

 
 
 
 
 
Top Scoops Headlines

 

Selpius Bobii:Tragic Bloodshed in Waghete, Papua - Suspected Serious Human Rights Violations

Ever since West Papua was annexed into the Republic of Indonesia on 1 May 1963, it has been nothing other than a land smeared with blood and at every moment the blood of Papuans has been shed by the continuous killings. More>>

Leslie Bravery: Simon Schama – Ideology Versus Truth And Reason

In the third part of his BBC history documentary The Story of the Jews Simon Schama announced “I am a Zionist and quite unapologetic about it.” That honest but blunt admission advises us that when the subject of Israel/Palestine is under discussion, ... More>>

Ramzy Baroud: South Vs. North: Yemen Teeters Between Hope And Division

On Oct 12, tens of thousands of Yemenis took to the streets of Eden in the South of the country, mostly demanding secession from the north. The date is significant, for it marks the 1967 independence of South Yemen, ending several decades of British ... More>>

Binoy Kampmark: Ralph Miliband: The Illusion Of Radical Change

Radical conservative critiques often suffer from one crippling flaw: they are mirrors of their revolutionary heritage, apologies for their own deceptions. If you want someone who detests the Left, whom better than someone formerly of the card carrying, ... More>>

Hadyn Green: TPP: This Is A Fight Worth Joining

Trade negotiations are tense affairs. There are always interested parties trying to get your ear, long nights spent arguing small but technical points, and the invisible but ever present political pressure. So it was in Brunei late August where the latest ... More>>

Ramzy Baroud: Giap, Wallace, And The Never-Ending Battle For Freedom

'Nothing is more precious than freedom,” is quoted as being attributed to Vo Nguyen Giap, a Vietnamese General that led his country through two liberation wars. The first was against French colonialists, the second against the Americans. More>>

John Chuckman: The Poor People Of Egypt

How is it that the people of Egypt, after a successful revolution against the repressive 30-year government of President Mubarak, a revolution involving the hopes and fears of millions and a substantial loss of life, have ended up almost precisely where ... More>>

Harvey Wasserman: 14,000 Hiroshimas Still Swing In The Fukushima Air...

Japan’s pro-nuclear Prime Minister has finally asked for global help at Fukushima. It probably hasn’t hurt that more than 100,000 people have signed petitionscalling for a global takeover; more than 8,000 have viewed a new YouTube on it. More>>

Get More From Scoop

 
 
TEDxAuckland
 
 
 
 
 
Monitor
Search Scoop  
 
 
Powered by Vodafone
NZ independent news