
Three grizzly bears have been killed in Montana, US, after testing positive for the “highly pathogenic” bird flu virus HPAI, according to the state Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks.
According to Dr. Jennifer Ramsey, a wildlife veterinarian, these are the first reported cases of bird flu in grizzly bears in Montana and the first cases in the country of the current HPAI outbreak.
The young bears were spotted at three different locations in the western part of the state in the fall, the Department of Fisheries, Wildlife and Parks said in a statement.
Neurological problems in mammals
The bears “were in poor condition, disoriented and partially blind, among other neurological problems,” the statement said. “They were euthanized due to illness and poor condition.”
Avian influenza is caused by a virus that spreads rapidly among birds. Cases of HPAI were reported last year in a ferret and fox in Montana, and in raccoons, black bears and coyotes in other states and countries, according to the Montana agency.
“The virus is transmitted from one bird to another,” Dr. Ramsey told CNN, estimating that the mammals likely became infected by “eating the carcasses of HPAI-infected birds.”
Source: Kathimerini

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