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Thousands of snow geese fall dead from the sky in Idaho (I didn't see this in the news...)
March 2015 – IDAHO - Avian
cholera is suspected in the deaths of at least 2,000 snow geese that
fell dead from the sky in Idaho while migrating to nesting grounds on
the northern coast of Alaska, wildlife managers said Monday. Dozens of
Idaho Department of Fish and Game workers and volunteers at the weekend
retrieved and incinerated carcasses of snow geese found near bodies of
water and a wildlife management area in the eastern part of the state,
said agency spokesman Gregg Losinski. Avian cholera is believed to be
the culprit in the deaths mostly because of the way the birds died, he
said. “Basically, they just fell out of the sky,” said Losinski.
He
said biologists were awaiting results from a state wildlife lab to
confirm the birds died of the highly contagious disease, which is caused
by bacteria that can survive in soil and water for up to four months.
Humans face a small risk of contracting the disease but the more
immediate threat is to wildlife in the vicinity of contaminated
carcasses, Losinski said. About 20 bald eagles were seen near areas
where snow geese carcasses littered the ground but a lengthy incubation
period makes it unclear if the eagles were infected and would carry the
ailment elsewhere, said Losinski.
It
was not known where the snow geese – named for their white plumage and
for breeding in the far northern corners of Alaska, Canada, Greenland
and Siberia – contracted avian cholera during a migration that saw them
wing north from wintering grounds in the American Southwest and Mexico,
he said. Outbreaks like the one found affecting the migrating snow geese
in Idaho occur periodically in the United States and elsewhere,
Losinski said. Avian cholera is the most important infectious disease
affecting wild waterfowl in North America, according to the U.S.
Geological Survey. –Yahoo News
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