Live poultry markets in New York City, suburbs shut after bird flu detected
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Authorities found avian flu at markets in Queens, the Bronx, and Brooklyn since Jan 31.
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION: UNSPLASH
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NEW YORK - Authorities in New York state have temporarily closed all live poultry markets in New York City and three suburban counties after bird flu was detected at seven markets within the past week, according to a notice on as authorities nationwide track the current bird flu outbreak, including the state’s website.
Bird flu has also infected about two-thirds of the dairy herds in California, the biggest milk-producing state, and nearly 70 people since April.
In New York state, the five-day closure of live poultry markets in New York City and three counties–Westchester, Suffolk and Nassau–will allow them to be cleaned and disinfected to help prevent spread of the disease, New York Governor Kathy Hochul said in a statement.
Authorities found avian flu at markets in Queens, the Bronx, and Brooklyn since Jan 31, according to the statement.
“I have directed our state agencies to use all available resources to ensure we are taking every measure necessary to keep the risk to the public low,” Hochul said.
Wild birds often carry the virus during migration periods and can transmit it to poultry through direct contact or through contaminated feces or feathers.
To contain the virus, poultry are culled when even one bird in a flock tests positive.
The US Department of Agriculture for the first time this week confirmed a second strain of bird flu in US dairy cattle, a discovery that ramped up concerns about its spread. REUTERS

