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Ducks at Montana State University Pond to be Part of Nationwide Testing

Last Updated: September 24, 2007 | Related resource areas: Wildlife Damage Management


Montana's participation in the early detection effort will supply information used to create a national database to track avian influenza information collected from wild birds throughout the country.


Released Sept. 21, 2007

BOZEMAN, Mont. -- Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, in collaboration with USDA Wildlife Services and several other state and federal agencies, is sampling waterfowl across Montana as part of a national effort for the early detection of avian influenza (AI). Testing on ducks at Bozeman's MSU Duck Pond will begin in mid-September and continue intermittently through December.

"The AI team will collect ducks in traps set on land, sample them, and release them unharmed," said Rose Jaffe, FWP's avian influenza coordinator in Bozeman.

Jaffe said visitors to the popular waterfowl pond can continue to enjoy watching the birds, but she asks that visitors refrain from feeding waterfowl while the tests are being conducted.

Although more than 140 different avian influenza viruses are commonly found in wild bird populations, the highly pathogenic H5N1 Asian strain has not been detected in any wild bird in North America. In addition, the virus does not move easily between birds and other species, and there is only one suspected case of human infection from wild birds world wide.

"We are collecting 1,500 samples statewide this fall and early winter from areas where waterfowl concentrate, including urban duck flocks and duck banding operations on national wildlife refuges. We will also sample again this year at hunter check stations," Jaffe said. "Montana's participation in the early detection effort will supply information used to create a national database to track avian influenza information collected from wild birds throughout the country."

For more information about the project, visit the FWP Web site http://www.fwp.mt.gov, or call FWP at 994-6967.

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http://www.montana.edu/cpa/news/nwview.php?article=5147


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