Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, reported more detections of avian flu in commercial flocks this week, affecting more than 160,000 birds, according to notifications from the US Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS).
A commercial table egg-layer facility had the largest outbreak, with 104,800 birds sickened. There were also detections on a commercial turkey farm (36,000 birds) and poultry operation with 25,100 birds. The other major detection this week came from Sonoma County, California, where a commercial broiler production facility with 86,600 birds was hit with highly pathogenic bird flu.
In the past 30 days, avian flu has been confirmed in 52 flocks, including 19 commercials flocks, and 33 backyard flocks, affecting a total of 4.78 million birds.
In other bird flu news, two foxes, one in Los Angeles and the other in New Haven, Connecticut, were infected with bird flu, as was a domestic cat in Burlington, New Jersey.
Finally, there were also more than 120 wild bird detections this week, including more than 10 mallards in Rockingham County, New Hampshire, and a bald eagle in Somerset County, New Jersey.