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Avian influenza: 41 farms infected in France, a first case detected in Vendée

2022-01-04T13:42:59.115Z


At the end of last week, there were 26 epidemic outbreaks in farms in France. There are now more than 40, mostly da


The epidemic is spreading, but less quickly than last year.

France now has more than 40 outbreaks of avian influenza in breeding, including a first in Vendée, announced Tuesday the Minister of Agriculture, Julien Denormandie, evoking a "great source of concern".

The latest report, at the end of last week, reported 26 outbreaks on farms.

The virus was detected for the first time in a breeding farm in the North at the end of November, but most cases are now recorded in the South-West.

In detail, twenty homes are located in the Landes, eight in the North, seven in the Pyrénées-Atlantiques, five in the Gers and one in Vendée, the ministry told AFP.

"As I speak to you (...) in France we have 41 outbreaks of contamination in breeding", specified the Minister during a press conference.

He believes the situation is better than last winter, when the epizootic caused nearly 500 breeding outbreaks.

More than three million poultry, mostly ducks, had been slaughtered.

"Last year at the same time we were at more than sixty" homes.

"It had been many weeks since the spread of the virus was no longer under control at all," continued Julien Denormandie.

“Necessary” containment measures

The ministry estimated on December 31 that between 600,000 and 650,000 poultry had been slaughtered since the start of the epizootic in November.

He did not provide updated data on Tuesday.

"What we are following more closely are the areas with the greatest density" of livestock, "in particular the Landes, in particular the Gers and we had a case in Vendée," said the Minister of Agriculture.

Read also Avian influenza: 5 minutes to understand why farmers will confine their poultry

He also defended the confinement imposed, from the beginning of November, of outdoor poultry to avoid contact with migratory birds carrying the virus.

The measure, often experienced as heartbreaking by breeders and denounced by part of the profession, had been decreed even earlier, in September, in the areas most at risk.

“Protective measures were necessary.

If we had not taken them, the situation I am describing to you today would be much more dramatic, ”explained Julien Denormandie.

France is affected for the fourth time since 2015 by this virus which does not spare its European neighbors either.

Source: leparis

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