Australia: Quarantined chickens to be euthanised

26-07-2013 | |
Australia: Quarantined chickens to be euthanised

A flock of fancy chickens, currently housed in a secure quarantine facility, will be euthanised because the birds are infected with an exotic strain of Salmonella that cannot be effectively treated.

The syndicate behind the importation, the Australian Rare Poultry Importation Syndicate Inc (ARPIS), informed the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF) it consented to the destruction of the flock. The syndicate relinquished ownership of the flock on the understanding the chickens would be destroyed.

Australia’s import protocols require an absence of Salmonella pullorum and a number of other diseases exotic to Australia for any chickens to pass through quarantine.



Eggs and birds pose a high disease risk to Australian birds and related industries, which are worth more than $2.5 billion a year.



Salmonella pullorum is an exotic, infectious disease that can cause reproductive issues, wasting and death and export markets typically require a declaration that Australia is free of the Salmonella strain to allow us to export.



The presence of the disease in the flock was confirmed a few weeks ago through a culture test which grew the Salmonella pullorum strain from a pooled sample from a number of birds. This testing was conducted under quarantine conditions from samples of dead chicks by Australia’s premier testing facility at CSIRO’s Australian Animal Health Laboratory.



ARPIS conceded the need to destroy the chickens after DAFF allowed it to conduct its own additional blood tests to provide the syndicate with more information about the extent of the disease in the consignment.



The importer managed all the birds as a single flock so no birds could be assumed to be free from the disease. Australia requires birds to be free from the disease for two generations before import is allowed because birds can remain symptom free until maturity or until they are under stress.



The Federal Court of Australia’s injunction has been removed and DAFF will start to destroy the flock under veterinary supervision soon.



Australia has a robust biosecurity system – which is based on rigorous science – and provides a high level of protection for its primary industries and environment.

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