Shimla:With the death toll of migratory waterbirds rising to 2,401, and almost half of them being endangered bar-headed goose visiting the Pong wetlands, Himachal Pradesh wildlife authorities on Monday said that avian influenza (H5N1) was the cause.
The dead included a little white-fronted goose that was visiting the Pong wetlands alone for the past three years.
Principal Chief Conservator Forest, Wildlife, Archana Sharma told the media here that 628 dead birds were found in the Pong catchment area on Monday. "With them, the total number of birds that lost their lives rose to 2,401."
Communication of the ICAR-National Institute of High-Security Animal Diseases (NIHSAD) based in Bhopal said all the five birds sent it tested positive for H5N1 avian influenza virus by real-time RT-PCR tests.
Chief Conservator Wildlife of Pong wetlands -- one of the largest in northern India, Upasna Patyal, told that carcasses had been sent to different laboratories to determine the cause of death. The local administration has already sounded an alert by banning all the human activities within a 10-km radius of the Pong wetlands in Kangra district.
The bird flu can spread to human beings and turn fatal. Besides the bar-headed goose, the other species were the shoveler, the river tern, the pochard and the common teal. Some birds -- including the bar-headed goose -- were seen acting strangely before their deaths, Patyal said.
"When you're seeing that birds are not able to take the flight despite healthy wings, it's really disturbing. At some distance, you find their carcasses," she said.
The bird carcasses were sent to the Indian Veterinary Research Institute in Bareilly, the Regional Disease Diagnostic Laboratory in Jalandhar and the Wildlife Institute of India in Dehradun to know their cause of death.
The Rajasthan government last week sounded an alert after confirmation of avian influenza in crows that died in Jhalawar district. Indore in Madhya Pradesh has also reported the death of crows.
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