Health authorities will cull 11,000 chickens at a poultry farm in the Netherlands after an outbreak of a mild form of avian influenza, the Dutch Economic Affairs Ministry said on June 1. The chickens were believed to have the low-pathogenic strain, the ministry stated. The cull will be done as a precaution because the strain can mutate into a form that is fatal for poultry.
Authorities imposed a 1 kilometer safety perimeter around the farm banning transports of poultry, eggs and other farm products, according to a Reuters report. Testing would also be carried at 11 other farms in the area, it said.
Several cases of the low-pathogenic bird flu strain have been reported recently in the Netherlands. The most devastating outbreak of H7N7 avian flu in the country was in 2003 and led to the culling of 30 million birds, about a third of the nation's poultry flock.
Authorities imposed a 1 kilometer safety perimeter around the farm banning transports of poultry, eggs and other farm products, according to a Reuters report. Testing would also be carried at 11 other farms in the area, it said.
Several cases of the low-pathogenic bird flu strain have been reported recently in the Netherlands. The most devastating outbreak of H7N7 avian flu in the country was in 2003 and led to the culling of 30 million birds, about a third of the nation's poultry flock.
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