Romania

34,000 birds culled in bird flu outbreak in Romania

Hygiene & Biosecurity

The outbreak was discovered in a commercial farm near the Bulgarian border.

Posted on Mar 22 ,09:26

34,000 birds culled in bird flu outbreak in Romania

Romania has reported a new outbreak of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza, commonly called bird flu, on a farm in the south of the country, the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) said on Monday.

The outbreak in the town of Oinacu near the Bulgarian border killed 6,770 birds and led to the slaughter of the rest of the flock of nearly 34,000 animals, the Paris-based body said, quoting information from Romania’s health authorities (ANSVA).
Restrictions on the movement of birds, persons, means of transport and feed were imposed on the farm. The entire flock of birds has been euthanized, the resulting by-products together with officially retained eggs, feed debris, bedding and all that could be a source of infection has been destroyed by neutralization, according to the legal provisions, so as to avoid any risk of spreading the virus. Subsequently, the entire surface of the holding is to be disinfected. A protection zone within a radius of 3 km and a surveillance zone within a radius of 10 km have been delimited around the outbreak. Restrictions will be maintained in these areas for at least 30 days, ANSVSA announced.

 NEWSLETTER - Stay informed with the latest news!

Comments





Similar articles

Largest annual sheep and lamb slaughter in decades as cattle female slaughter rate eases

Numbers analysed by Meat & Livestock Australia (MLA) show that 26.6 million lambs were slaugh...


Read more Read more
EU

Commission presents its roadmap for a thriving EU farming and agri-food sector

Simplifying further the policies and increasing the uptake of innovation and digitalisation are p...


Read more Read more
BELGIUM

Contamination with highly pathogenic variant confirmed at poultry farm in Belgium

The Federal Agency for the Safety of the Food Chain (FAVV) warns that dead or sick birds should n...


Read more Read more
Websolutions by Angular Software and SpiderClass