Dr.
Paul Miller on the Avian Influenza threat 2/27/06 |
| Current
questions from Paul Walsh to Dr. Paul Miller on the Avian Influenza
threat 2/27/06 Since pigeons are susceptible to the Asian strain of Avian Influenza, they will probably be regulated to some degree in areas where the Asian Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza is found. I would NOT expect that to happen here unless the Asian HPAI gets here. 2. After many stories from news networks, magazines and national papers, the public opinion will be influenced in regard to our pigeons. Is the current bird flu and possible other - new to come viruses - a threat to our pigeon sport the way we know it today? It will possibly change the way we do things, but I do not see that it will completely stop the pigeon hobby. 3. Will we be able to go into the local Post office and ship our birds to a race across state lines? This all depends on the Post Office;. The state line business is a matter of how the respective state veterinarians perceive pigeons and racing; this becomes a matter of communication to some degree. They must be educated just like everybody else. 4. All pigeon fanciers are in the dark as to what is happening on how this flu epidemic is going to affect them. At this point, nobody knows for sure just how things will go. 5. In China I hear from a contact with a Chinese magazine that things go on as normal with no restrictions for the pigeon community. China is where all this started, and for exactly the reason you state: there is no government involvement or concern over this disease, and it has become a major problem worldwide. The west is just the opposite, over reactive and highly regulatory, and hence we have no problem with Avian Influenza here. Whenever it does arise here, regulatory authorities deal with it very swiftly and very decisively. 6. I have received many questions about the situation with the avian influenza in Europe. I would suggest that you refer all European questions to Dr. Pascal Lanneau in Belgium; he is the European pigeon expert. 7. At the present time I do have information that bird flu reached already about 10 countries in the European Union. At the time of this writing, there have been no cases of avian influenza reported in Belgium, Netherlands nor in the United Kingdom (3 important pigeon racing countries) France and Germany however have less luck. In these countries the presence of avian influenza has been found, this is the fact I get from Internet source Pipa Pigeon News.
8. France is the country of favor for liberation of pigeons for races from Belgium and the Netherlands. They might have
to fly a different racecourse. I would not fly pigeons through an area that has an Avian Flu outbreak that is infectious to pigeons; they will only be perceived as carriers of the disease. I know this flu will have an affect on what happens in the USA. Stay alert, and stay informed; be very vigilant. Deal with situations as they arise on a scientific basis; try to avoid letting things get too political or emotional. 10. If there is a mandatory lock up of your pigeons, many pigeon fanciers will slowly loose their motivation to keep racing pigeons. This would be a disaster for the pigeon sport in the future and will surely end racing, as we know it today. Fly One-loft races if necessary if you are forced to stop racing for a year. 11. Pigeon flyers
are not the experts looking for the solution to the flu problem; we
have to rely on the government to bring in the experts. 12. The five million
dollar question is will the experts save our sport or kill it? The I.F. and its
members are Very Grateful to Dr. Paul Miller from the State of Pennsylvania
Veterinary laboratory for his candid answers to our questions |