✕ CLOSE Online Special City News Entrepreneurship Environment Factcheck Everything Woman Home Front Islamic Forum Life Xtra Property Travel & Leisure Viewpoint Vox Pop Women In Business Art and Ideas Bookshelf Labour Law Letters
Click Here To Listen To Trust Radio Live

AGRO SOLUTIONS: Biosecurity basics for poultry operations as avian influenza spreads

Abby Schuft is an Extension educator with the University of Minnesota, who works with poultry farmers across the state on applied biosecurity. Schuft talks about…

Abby Schuft is an Extension educator with the University of Minnesota, who works with poultry farmers across the state on applied biosecurity. Schuft talks about the tips for farm workers and service providers to prevent Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) from getting into poultry flocks.

With the avian influenza spreading throughout the region, now is the time for biosecurity to ramp up on poultry operations and for consumers to continue to support the poultry industry, an expert says.

Schuft said that avian influenza comes in two forms. There’s the low pathogenicity, which she said is a more common virus, and there tends to be a few cases in the state each year. Then there’s what’s affecting the state right now, which is the highly pathogenic avian influenza, which she said is extremely contagious.

“It’s highly virulent, which means it does spread so easily and very intensely,” she said. “And it has fatal implications for our domestic poultry.”

A spring avian influenza outbreak is somewhat rare, said Schuft, but it all comes down to how migrations are working this year and how the virus is spreading.

“We have seen this particular strain in Europe and Asia for over a year,” Schuft said. “So, it was more a matter of how it was going to get across the ocean logistically.”

Farm employees

Schuft said that for on-farm employees at poultry operations, it’s important to “absolutely and completely understand what your protocols are” for enhanced biosecurity.

“Right now, it is our farm workers’ primary role to keep the farm negative from highly pathogenic avian influenza, and that will ultimately look different on each farm premises, but to know that they’re going to need to be flexible, and it might not be business as usual,” she said. “They might be requested to participate in extra biosecurity protocols, maybe changing in and out of booties more frequently during the day, or wearing different coveralls and showering more frequently.”

“Many backyard flock owners might not necessarily think what they do is biosecurity, but there’s probably a lot of actions that they complete each day that truly is biosecurity, they just might not associate that word with what they do,” she said.

“So, if you have chore boots, or chore shoes, to make sure they’re wearing those only in the area where their chickens are being kept, and that they leave them there, so that there’s no potential tracking of any feces or litter across the yard or into your car, for example,” she said. “Commercial farms are going to do the same sort of thing.”

For entrances to single barns on multi-barn sites, barn biosecurity is key, said Schuft, and operations need a line of separation around each barn in addition to the separation area for the farm unit. Lines of separation define clean areas from dirty areas.

“That line of separation is going to be a functional line that’s going to separate your birds from the rest of the world,” Schuft said. “And not to turn anybody into a germaphobe, but we should assume that environmentally, the virus exists everywhere else in the world. And we want to try to keep it out of the space that your birds are inhabiting.”

Common errors

Schuft said the common errors when it comes to biosecurity will be complacency and rushing.

“That’s when errors happen, when you become complacent,” said Schuft. “And if you’re trying to get in and out too quickly.”

She said that farm workers need to be mentally present and truly thinking about each of the steps each and every time that they are entering and exiting a barn, and making sure they are following the farm protocol.

“They’ve done it hundreds of times, but it just takes one time,” she said.

Service providers

For service providers, Schuft said that biosecurity may mean having them stay off the farm entirely. That’s especially true for farms that are in the control area of farms that had a detection of avian influenza — which is a 6.2 mile radius around the infected premises.

“Most often those farms that are affected will already be saying, we want to limit movements to our facility, so we are going to delay our garbage pickup for the week, and we are going to come to the post office to pick up any packages ourselves so they’re not being delivered,” Schuft said. “Those requests will not likely be uncommon, so don’t be surprised or taken off guard if those requests are made of you as a service provider.”

She said if you are a service provider and you’re still being asked to service a poultry operation, call the farm owners beforehand and ask what biosecurity steps you should take.

“Take a proactive approach to safely do your job so that that farm can safely continue to do their job,” she said.

 Source: agweek

VERIFIED: It is now possible to live in Nigeria and earn salary in US Dollars with premium domains, you can earn as much as $12,000 (₦18 Million).
Click here to start.