Mexico reports its first H5N1 bird flu infection

Mexico reports its first H5N1 bird flu infection

Mexico has reported a first case of the severe H5N1 strain of avian influenza, the Paris-based World Organization for Animal Health (WOAH) said on Friday.

The virus was detected in a wild bird in the Metepec district to the west of the capital Mexico City, the WOAH said, citing information from the Mexican authorities.

NEAR RECORD NUMBER OF US CHICKENS AND TURKEYS ARE DYING FROM AVIAN FLU

“This report represents the first isolation of a HPAI virus subtype H5N1 in Mexico, which occurred in a non-poultry bird and in one of the migratory wild bird corridors that cross the country,” it said.

A worker for the Mexican Secretariat of Agriculture, Livestock, Rural Development, Fisheries, & Nutrition sanitizes a truck used to transport chickens amid a bird flu outbreak in Mexico, on Feb. 26, 2013.
(HECTOR GUERRERO/AFP via Getty Images)

Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI), commonly called bird flu, has killed poultry flocks in the United States and Europe this year, with experts concerned that the virus has not abated as previously during the northern hemisphere summer.

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Mexico has experienced outbreaks of another bird flu strain, H7N3, in parts of the country in the past decade, including cases earlier this year.