Latest news with #gripeaviaria


Reuters
06-06-2025
- Business
- Reuters
Brazil authorities rule out suspected bird flu case at commercial farm
PORTO ALEGRE, June 6 (Reuters) - Brazil's Rio Grande do Sul state Agriculture Secretariat on Friday ruled out another suspected bird flu case at a commercial chicken farm in the town of Teutonia, after laboratory test results came back negative. The farm is located in Rio Grande do Sul state, the same state where the only other commercial farm outbreak occurred.


CNA
04-06-2025
- Business
- CNA
Brazil confirms bird flu case at zoo
BRASILIA: The Brazilian government confirmed a case of bird flu at a zoo in its capital after two birds were found dead there last week. Brazil, the world's top exporter of chicken meat, has suspended its shipments to more than 20 countries due to an avian flu outbreak that began in mid-May. Brasilia's zoo closed on May 28 after finding a dead pigeon and dead duck that it suspected were cases of the disease. Samples from the birds revealed "the detection of a case of highly pathogenic avian influenza", the Federal District's Agriculture Secretariat said on social media Tuesday. "With the confirmation of the outbreak ... the closure of the zoo will remain in effect until Jun 12, if no new cases are detected on-site." This brings the total number of recently reported bird flu cases in Brazil to five, according to the ministry of agriculture. The first case was recorded on May 16 at a farm in the southern state of Rio Grande do Sul. Avian flu has spread globally in recent years, leading to mass culling of poultry, some human deaths, and a spike in egg prices. Infections in humans can cause severe disease with a high mortality rate, according to the World Health Organization, but the virus does not appear to move easily from person to person. Human cases detected so far were mostly in people who had close contact with infected birds and other animals, or contaminated environments.


Malay Mail
29-05-2025
- Business
- Malay Mail
Brazil shuts Brasilia zoo after bird flu kills wild pigeon and duck, export halt hits 24 countries including China
BRASÍLIA, May 29 — Brasilia's zoo shut out visitors yesterday after detecting suspected fatal cases of bird flu in a pigeon and a duck two weeks after an outbreak was detected on a poultry farm in Brazil's south. The agriculture department announced the zoo in Brazil's capital would be closed temporarily, but without saying when it will reopen. The dead birds were wild, not part of the zoo's stock, said the department, adding the risk of human infection 'is considered low.' Brazil, the world's leading exporter of chicken meat, halted shipments to 24 countries — including China, its biggest customer — after registering a bird flu outbreak on a farm in the state of Rio Grande do Sul on May 16. Infections in humans can cause severe disease with a high mortality rate, according to the World Health Organization, but the virus does not appear to move easily from person to person. Human cases detected so far were mostly in people who had close contact with infected birds and other animals, or contaminated environments. — AFP


Reuters
28-05-2025
- Business
- Reuters
Brazil's Tocantins state says agriculture ministry ruled out bird flu on commercial farm
SAO PAULO, May 28 (Reuters) - Brazil's Tocantins state said on Wednesday the agriculture ministry has ruled out an outbreak of bird flu on a local commercial farm, citing conclusive test results received from the ministry. There are currently seven potential outbreaks of highly pathological avian influenza in Brazil under investigation, including one on a commercial farm in Rio Grande do Sul, according to the ministry's website.


Reuters
20-05-2025
- Health
- Reuters
Genetic test suggests Brazil's bird flu cases in farm and zoo share same strain
PORTO ALEGRE, Brazil, May 20 (Reuters) - The results of genetic tests suggested that Brazil's first outbreak of bird flu on a commercial poultry farm in the state of Rio Grande do Sul shares the strain with cases in zoo animals in the same state, an official told Reuters on Tuesday. Rosane Collares, a director at the state's agriculture department, said is not yet possible to ascertain a direct relation between the two outbreaks.