Authorities have also imposed a ban on poultry and poultry product
transport within a 10 kilometre radius, the statement said
Dutch officials have culled 190,000 ducks on a central Netherlands farm where inspectors have confirmed the presence of a highly infectuous strain of bird flu, officials and local media said Sunday.
The
outbreak was detected at a farm in Biddinghuizen, about 70 kilometres
(43 miles) west of Amsterdam, where about 180,000 ducks were put down
together with another 10,000 within a one kilometre radius, the Dutch
food and safety watchdog NVWA said.
"There are three other poultry farms within a three kilometre radius and they are being monitored," the NVWA added in a statement.
Authorities have also imposed a ban on poultry and poultry product transport within a 10 kilometre radius, the statement said.
Tests
indicated that the birds were killed by an H5N8 variant of the disease
"which is highly infectuous" for poultry -- killing about 30 percent of
infected birds -- but not "very dangerous to humans", public newscaster NOS said.
Earlier
this month the Netherlands shuttered petting zoos and banned duck
hunting as it stepped up measures to stem a bird flu outbreak blamed for
killing scores of poultry and more than a thousand wild birds in the
country.
In the western port of
Rotterdam, a park closed its animal section after several aquatic birds
were found to have died from the H5N8 virus. Others still not affected
have been penned in.
And on the banks of
Lake Markermeer, close to Amsterdam, about 1,250 wild birds were found
dead earlier this month, local news reports said.
The
H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed more than 420 people, mainly in
southeast Asia, since first appearing in 2003. Another strain of bird
flu, H7N9, has claimed more than 200 lives since emerging in 2013,
according to World Health Organisation figures.
Avian
flu severely hit the Netherlands in 2003 with health authorities
destroying some 30 million birds in an effort to quash an outbreak.
Around 106 million chickens are raised on Dutch poultry farms, according to the latest Dutch statistics.
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