Avian Flu Information Clearinghouse
for Bird Owners
UC Davis Veterinary Medicine ExtensionAI Recommendations Dr. Carol Cardona, Poultry Extension Veterinarian
II. Recommendations to prevent the spread and/or introduction of AIV
Based on our understanding of AIV sources and transmission, the following recommendations have been designed to prevent the spread of avian influenza between poultry premises and the introduction of new infections to susceptible birds. We have outlined these recommendations based on the three key principles of Biosecurity, isolation, traffic control, and sanitation. [read simplified Biosecurity for Small Flocks]
A. Isolation refers to the confinement of animals within a controlled environment.
A fence keeps your birds in, but it also keeps other animals out.
Mechanical transmission of AIV by anything that can walk, crawl, or fly from
farm to farm should be presumed.
1. Prevent the introduction of new birds to a previously infected facility for
2-3 weeks after cleanout.
2. Clean out vegetation around poultry houses and pens to remove shelter and
food for possible carriers.
3. Institute a vector control program for insect, mammalian, and avian vectors.
These vectors are important because they can mechanically carry infected feces
from one house, pen, or premise to another.
1. Improve barriers to prevent the access of wild birds to poultry houses.
2. Institute an insect control program. Flies of several species are important
in the transfer of AIV.
3. Rodents have been implicated in the transfer of AIV. Rodent control and preventing
their traffic between houses on a single premise are essential.
4. Prevent the accumulation of standing water. This is a great attraction to
migrating waterfowl and shorebirds, both of which have been implicated in AI
outbreaks. All birds can transmit AIV mechanically, but waterfowl, and shorebirds,
including gulls are important because they can bring AIV into a previously uninfected
flock and begin an infection that rapidly spreads.
5. Limit sources of food for wild and free-flying birds. Clean up spills when
they happen.
6. Educate your employees about the dangers of live bird markets and advise them
not to raise their own poultry for any purpose. Advise them also, not to visit
live bird markets or other poultry premises when they might also have contact
with your flock.
7. Advise your employees to avoid dead wild and free-flying birds they find.
Any found on your premises must be treated as though they are highly infectious.
Handle them with gloves, place in a plastic bag, and seal it, finally, a complete
change of clothes including shoes and a shower should happen before entering
poultry facilities.
B. Traffic Control includes both the traffic onto your farm and the traffic patterns within the farm.
The spread of avian influenza follows the movement of people and equipment.
1. Be a good neighbor. If you have or suspect AI, initiate a self-imposed quarantine.
2. Keep logbooks of visitors to your facilities.
3. Keep human farm-to-farm traffic to a minimum. Conduct business by phone when
possible.
4. Find out where someone has been before inviting them onto your premises. Inspect
visitors for evidence of cleanliness and contact with other birds before they
come onto your premises.
5. Make no unnecessary visits to other farms.
6. Do not let truck drivers, repairmen, or delivery personnel step out onto your
facility without clean or new protective foot covering and clean coveralls. It
is best to provide plastic boots and coveralls for this purpose. Shoes and clothes
are an excellent vehicle for the transmission of AIV.
7. If your company has several farms, establish zones to prevent one person from
traveling to all farms.
8. Require employees and crews to wear freshly laundered clothing or clothing
supplied at the farm each day. Do not allow persons employed at other poultry
operations on your premises.
9. Isolate dead bird disposal outside the perimeter of the ranch. Control traffic
to and from bird disposal. Infected carcasses can be a significant source of
AIV.
C. Sanitation addresses the disinfection of materials, people and equipment entering the farm and the cleanliness of the personnel on the farm.
Organic material greatly increases the resistance of avian influenza viruses
to disinfection.
Cleaning and disinfection
1. Influenza virus is extremely sensitive to most disinfectants and can be inactivated
by heating and/or drying. A list of disinfectants effective in killing AIV follow.
2. Organic material must be removed before disinfection by any method can be
effective. Cleaning protocols should include a fair amount of elbow grease and
critical inspection.
Prevent the spread of AIV on equipment
1. Make sure that service persons’ vehicles are not contaminated with litter
or feces. Wash and disinfect the tires and wheel wells of all vehicles coming
onto your premises.
2. Wash with detergent and disinfect bird hauling equipment and vehicles.
3. Wash and disinfect manure clean-out equipment taken from farm to farm.
4. Enclose all dead birds to be taken to the laboratory in plastic bags. Confine
live birds being submitted to the laboratory in boxes that will not return to
your farm. Disinfect any vehicles returning from the laboratory including the
floor mats. Do not let personnel who have been to the laboratory return to your
facility without a shower and a change of clothes.
5. Do not allow vehicles in areas grossly contaminated with manure.
6. Wash and disinfect all egg trays, carts, and racks. Remove all feathers, feces,
and eggs material.
7. AIV can be transmitted at egg breaking facilities and processing plants. Equipment
must be cleaned and disinfected at these facilities to prevent the spread of
AIV to producers bringing their eggs or poultry to the plant.
The specifics of cleaning and disinfecting any facility will depend on a large
number of factors that differ between farms. Hence, it is not possible to address
each individual concern. However, these are some guidelines that generally address
cleaning and disinfection and some facts that should be considered when developing
a strategy for cleaning and disinfection following a flock pushout. In all situations,
it is highly recommended that a professional advisor be consulted to help develop
and implement any plans.
General comments
1. Heating can be used to inactivate AIV. Heating a building to 90°F or higher
has been used in other outbreaks as an effective method of sanitation.
2. Spraying a facility with a viricide after depopulation is another method.
At the same time a vector control program should be instituted, followed by removal
of manure, cleaning of all surfaces followed by a second application of viricidal
spray. All manure should be removed and all surfaces thoroughly dry cleaned prior
to applying disinfectants. Next, apply the disinfectant to all surfaces twice,
allowing the disinfectant to dry between applications. The house should be left
empty for 2-3 weeks before repopulation.
Manure handling
1. Remove all manure completely. Scrape the sides of the buildings to remove all residual organic material that might harbor virus. Manure from infected flocks should be handled in one or more of the following ways:
- Spread manure on fields and plow under the same day.
- Compost.
- Bury.
- Remove all manure from the house, cover with a tarp. Virus will be inactivated once daily temperatures have consistently risen to 90°F for one week. After inactivation, the manure can be handled normally.
2. For manure removed more than 4 months after initial infection, handle normally. Special precautions are not required.
Cleaning a multi-age facility
1. Managing a multi-age flock in a clean out situation requires persistence and
dedication to the goal of preventing a new infection in clean birds.
2. The premise can be divided into sectors that are managed as separate facilities.
Buffers must be established between buildings in order to isolate them from each
other and to stop traffic flow between them.
3. Once barriers between houses have been established an individual house can
then be depopulated, cleaned, and repopulated with uninfected birds.
4. It must be remembered that infectious virus may remain in manure for up to
4 months after initial infection of the flocks.
Cleaning a single age facility
1. Follow a complete clean out and disinfection protocol. Include a vector control
program. Leave buildings, pens, and pastures empty 2-3 weeks after depopulation.
The influenza virus is extremely sensitive to almost any disinfectant. However,
it is very difficult to inactivate the virus if it is in organic material, such
as feces.
Disinfectants that will kill avian influenza virus
1. One-Stroke EnvironR
2. Any detergent
3. Formaldehyde
4. Bleach
5. Ammonia
6. Acids
7. Heating to 90°F for 3 hours, 100°F for 30 min.
8. Drying
9. Iodine containing solutions
Sources of equipment to use in this and other biosecurity programs
1. Portable high-pressure sprayers can be purchased from hardware stores at a
cost of $100-$500. These sprayers are useful in washing and disinfecting equipment
and poultry houses.
2. Hand-held sprayers can be purchased from hardware stores for $30-70. These
items are helpful for spraying disinfectants on the floor mats of cars, disinfecting
wheel wells, etc. In addition, the same type of sprayer can be used to distribute
insecticides in a vector control program.
3. Disposable coveralls, boots, and caps can be purchased from several places
including the Nasco catalog (1-800-558-9595) and Veterinary Services in Modesto
(209) 545-5100. Costs: Tyvek disposable coveralls are $2.50-$3.50 each, plastic
boots are $10-$13/10 pairs, and bouffant caps are $14/case of 500. These items
are useful to provide for visitors.
4. Other materials important in a biosecurity program including signs, gates,
pylons, and other indications of barriers can be purchased for minimal cost.
These items are important in preventing unwanted human traffic and are well worth
their cost.
Frequently asked questions
1. Are the flu viruses of human and birds the same?
In most cases, the influenza viruses that infect birds do not infect humans and
vice versa. However, in Hong Kong in 1997, a unique AI virus infected both chickens
and humans. This appears to have been a unique occurrence but, just in case,
the World Health Organization continuously monitors human influenza viruses isolated
from cases all over the world for avian viruses.
2. What are the risks of getting avian influenza from waterfowl?
Avian influenza virus infections are widespread in wild birds, especially ducks.
Migrating waterfowl are a significant source of avian influenza viruses especially
in the major flyways. Turkeys on open ranges in Minnesota, a state in the major
flyway for migrating ducks, frequently experience AI problems. But the prevalence
of AI in turkeys has been high in some years and minimal in others. The reason
why influenza viruses come and go is not known. The risk to susceptible birds
from contact with waterfowl must be considered very high although it may vary
from year to year for unknown reasons.
3. Why can’t I vaccinate my flocks?
Vaccines effectively prevent the clinical signs of influenza infections in many
species including poultry. However, the vaccines are not cross-protective for
the 15 virus subtypes that can infect poultry. Since there is no way to predict
which type will infect a flock, vaccines are generally not practical to prevent
or limit infections.
4. What should I do if I suspect avian influenza in my birds?
You should contact your veterinarian if you observe any of the signs of AI, especially
if they are accompanied by a drop in feed consumption and/or a significant drop
in egg production. Because the signs of AI are so variable, it is important to
get the help of an expert for diagnosis.
If you have further questions please contact UC Davis Veterinary Medicine Extension
(530) 754-5041 or (559) 688-1731 ext. 228.
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