Please Note! ScienceBlogs is taking a break while we upgrade the system. Read on for more...

Smooth Pebbles

David Dobbs writes on science, medicine, nature, and culture.

Profile

ddsunnysb.jpg Author and journalist David Dobbs writes on science, medicine, and culture for the New York Times Magazine, Slate, Scientific American Mind, and other publications; "Buried Answers," one of his features for the Times Magazine, will appear in Houghton Mifflin's esteemed 2006 Best American Science and Nature Writing. The author of three books (see below), he is currently working on a book about the experience and neurobiology of fear. You can find more of his work at his website.

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

BOOKS by David Dobbs



SMALL%20REEF%20COVER.gif

Reef Madness: Charles Darwin, Alexander Agassiz, and the Meaning of Coral.
Oliver Sacks calls it "brilliantly written, almost unbearably poignant... The coral reef story becomes a microcosm of the conflicts -- between idealism and empiricism, God and evolution -- which were to split science and culture in the nineteenth century, and which still split them today.”

GreatGulfCover.jpg
The Great Gulf
An epistemological argument disguised as fish fight.

0930031814.01._AA_SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg
The Northern Forest (with Richard Ober)
An environmental debate misses the most essential relationships in the ecosystem at hand.

Archives

Search this blog

« My article on Mirror Neurons | Main | Climate change as a test of empiricism and secular democracy »

Wild birds do .. no wait, they don't ... well maybe they DO spread H5N1

Category: Environment/natureMedicine
Posted on: June 4, 2006 9:14 PM, by David Dobbs

from New Scientist, 30 May 2006:

Wild birds have helped transmit the deadly H5N1 bird flu across Eurasia, a meeting of 300 scientists at the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) concluded on Wednesday. But killing them to prevent further spread of the disease is not the answer, they warn.

I wrote an article about this in Audubon this spring, concluding from the divided and tenuous opinions and facts at hand then that wild birds almost certainly did help spread avian flu. Since then, opinion among scientists has swung a couple of times as the evidence bounced about. The appearance of infected birds in Africa this winter encouraged many to think the birds were spreading H5N1 — a notion the subsequent failure of significant summertime spread to Europe cast into doubt. And some of the most convincing evidence in favor of a spread theory showed holes. For instance, the death from bird flu of hundreds of gulls at a highly isolated lake on the Tibetan plateau last winter seemed firm evidence that wild birds were spreading the flu, since no poultry farms were known to be nearby. Then a few weeks ago it came out that there were poultry farms nearby.

Last week the UN FAO conference, after sorting through such variables and ambiguities, concluded that wild birds are playing a significant role in spreading H5N1. It concluded, reports New Scientist, that

while poultry has dominated the spread of the disease, wild birds have also played a role, particularly in transmitting the H5N1 virus long distances across Eurasia during migration.
The FAO's chief vet, Juan Lubroth, says “we don’t need prime ministers to come out and say, 'we’ll cut off the tops of trees or drain the wetlands' [to kill the carriers]". Instead, scientists at the meeting called for increased research to see which species carry the virus, whether it can persist in wild bird populations, and to where the birds migrate.

Given how uncertain we remain about how this is spreading, this seems a good idea.

Blogs in the Network

Advertisement

Top Five: Most Active

Search All Blogs

Science News From:

Science News from NYTimes.com