Canada aims to protect cattle industry as U.S. avian flu outbreak spreads
Dr. Rob Tremblay, an Ontario-based bovine health specialist who has been advising Dairy Farmers of Canada on the avian flu issue, said farmers who are concerned about the virus can reduce the likelihood of their animals being exposed by maintaining a "closed herd" for the immediate future.
"That means don't purchase animals, at least for the time being, unless it's absolutely necessary," he said.
When avian flu is found on a poultry farm in Canada, the CFIA places the farm under quarantine and orders the birds destroyed to prevent spread of the disease. (The disease spreads rapidly between birds and carries a high bird mortality rate).
When the illness appears in cattle, it tends to be milder and the animals generally recover on their own so infected cows don't need to be culled, Tremblay said.
In addition, the World Organization for Animal Health does not recommend international trade restrictions or import bans on dairy or beef products from countries that have had cases.
Tremblay said that means if Canada were to have its own outbreak of avian flu in a domestic dairy herd, the economic implications would be less severe than certain other animal illnesses. The deadly pig disease African swine fever, for example, has never been found in Canada but a single case could result in countries around the world shutting their doors to Canadian pork products. That would not happen in the event of avian flu.
Still, for an individual farmer, a discovery of avian flu in their dairy herd would be a significant blow, Tremblay added.
"The loss of milk, the extra work, the cost of dealing with animals that are sick and the stress that's associated with that—I think it could be personally devastating, for sure," he said.
"And it would have a financial impact at the farm level."
With files from The Associated Press