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Livetec Systems is urging the farming industry to take a closer look at biosecurity, following confirmation of the worldโs first case of avian influenza (H5N1) in a sheep on a smallholding in Yorkshire.
The sheep, which tested positive for antibodies through milk and blood samples, showed no clinical signs, but Livetecโs Group technical director, Julian Sparrey, says the case should act as a warning.
โThe big question is how the virus got into the sheep in the first place,โ he says.
โWas it wild bird droppings on pasture? Contact with infected domestic poultry? Transmission due to poor on-farm biosecurity? We just donโt know yet, and thatโs whatโs worrying.
โIt was only picked up because there was already a poultry outbreak on the holding. Without that, it would have been completely missed.โ
With 170 wild bird H5N1 incidents reported in the past month alone, Livetec warns that virus pressure is high โ increasing the chances of livestock exposure through contaminated water, wildlife, and day-to-day farm activity.
Livetec is therefore calling on Defra to expand active surveillance, particularly on mixed-species holdings, to build up a picture of what is happening.
But Mr Sparrey says farmers should act now and not wait for direction.
โRunning separate biosecurity protocols for different species is challenging, but not impossible. Itโs about thinking practically โ for example, thinking about where your boots go, what kit youโre sharing, and whether animals' co-graze,โ he adds.
โWeโve always strongly advised against co-grazing ruminants and poultry due to the risks of Salmonella and E. coli transmission between the species. Now AI presents another risk.โ
He adds: โThis might be a one-off case, or it might be the first sign of something more. Either way, itโs a reminder that we canโt take excellent biosecurity for granted.โ
Livetecโs biosecurity recommendations
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