Bird flu was confirmed in a flock of chickens in Texas, the
fourth US state hit by the disease in two weeks, state animal
health officials said Friday.
State authorities stressed that the H5N2 strain virus detected
in the flock in Gonzales County, Texas, is of no danger to humans
or food.
"The signs of the disease in chickens, indicates this virus is a
low-pathogenic strain, meaning it poses no health threat to humans
and causes relatively low mortality in chickens," the Texas Animal
Health Commission said in a statement.
The infected flock was quarantined. Texas and federal animal
health regulatory personnel are working to contain and eliminate
the infection and determine how the disease may have been
introduced.
The news came after two other strains of low-risk bird flu virus
have turned up in three East Coast states in the United States in
recent weeks.
After H7N2 strain was found in two flocks in Delaware and four
live chicken markets in New Jersey, another low-pathogenic strain
called H2N2 was discovered in a Pennsylvania flock.
But Texas state veterinarian Bob Hillman said it did not appear
to be any connection between the cases on the East Coast and the
infected flock in Texas.
After bird flu virus was confirmed in the first farm in Delaware
on Feb. 6, more than 20 countries have banned imports of US poultry
products.
(Xinhua News Agency February 21, 2004)