Bird Flu may have chosen Clonakilty as its first port of call in Ireland.
At any rate, a dead swan found in the bay has been sent off for analysis and the town is on tenterhooks until results come through. According to a report in yesterday’s Evening Echo ‘the number of dead birds being received by the District Veterinary Office in Cork has increased dramatically over the last two weeks. A swan, a duck and a gannet have been brought to the District Veterinary Office during the last week alone.
A spokeswoman for the DVO is reported to have said: “What was a trickle of birds over the winter has specifically increased over the last two weeks. A swan was brought in from the DVO in Clonakilty last week and we are expecting another local assignment. The rest of the birds have been from Co. Kerry. The Avian viorology section at the Deparment of Agriculture are currently testing blood and tissue samples for the H5N1 strain. It takes three to four days for definite results to be confirmed.
Meanwhile, Agriculture minister Mary Coughlan has said that the likelihood of a bird flu outbreak occurring in Ireland is slim because ‘almost all of the affected birds are mute swans from central Europe and Ireland doesn’t have a pattern of getting these birds’ she said.
The increase in the number of dead birds being reported was thought to be as much to do with the growing awareness of the possibility of bird flu causing people to report instances which ordinarily they would ignore. The Echo report says that bird flu has affected 20 countries so far resulting in 170 infections to humans, with 90 of those resulting in fatalities.
Clonakilty has a special defence in the shape of Joe Walsh, TD widely credited with keeping foot and mouth disease out of Ireland. Mr Walsh has said that he would like to a part of a bird flu task force.
“The bad thing with a bird flu virus is that is an invisible disease” he said.