Four dead seals test positive for bird flu in Scotland

Experts warn of ‘step-change’ in avian flu spread as number of cases in mammals continues to grow globally

Four dead seals have tested positive for bird flu in Scotland, as the number of cases of highly pathogenic avian flu in mammals continues to grow globally with experts warning of “a step-change” in its spread.

The largest ever bird flu outbreak had already spilled over into otters and foxes in the UK, with about 70 mammals having tested positive for the (HPAI) H5N1 virus. The seal carcasses were sent for screening last year and the results have come back positive, according to the Scottish Marine Animal Strandings Scheme (SMASS).

“Three out of the four harbour seals and one of the two grey seals from 2021 and early 2022 tested positive for HPAIV H5N1,” said SMASS in a statement. The animals were found in Aberdeenshire, Highlands, Fife and Orkney. “We also want to check our more recent cetacean cases for evidence of spillover,” it said.

As well as ripping through wild bird populations around the world, H5N1 has been found in dolphins, domestic cats, leopards and grizzly bears. Earlier this week the Peruvian government said nearly 580 sea lions had died from it in seven protected marine areas.

Generally it is believed mammals are getting infected by scavenging on dead or sick wild birds, but sea lions live in colonies. This has raised concerns it could now be spreading within mammal populations in the wild.

Scientists are analysing the genetic sequences of the virus in the colonies in Peru to establish if that is the case. “We need to wait for that analysis,” said Prof Ian Brown, the director of scientific services at the Animal and Plant Health Agency (Apha). “I think we need to be cautious before we assume viruses transmitting between the sea lions.”

It follows an outbreak at a mink farm in Spain, which was the first indication it could be spreading within mammal populations. It is believed the American mink were infected by H5N1 after coming into contact with wild gulls who were able to access their food. More than 50,000 mink were euthanised.

The evidence suggests it was spreading between the mink themselves, says Ursula Höfle, a research professor at the University of Castilla. “It looks like it was at least for this particular virus an isolated event,” she said. “We don’t really know, but there’s definitely increasing evidence for bird-to-mammal and mammal-to-mammal transmission.”

If it starts being able to spread between mammals there are concerns humans could be more vulnerable. “We’re seeing a bit of a step-change in the spread of this infection, and we shouldn’t sit idle because obviously we know what happened with Covid,” said Brown. He said it was possible to start taking preparatory steps for making a human vaccine for H5N1 but it would be “foolhardy” to make a vaccine now as it was impossible to know what strain might jump into humans, in the unlikely event that did happen.

The WHO director general, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said the situation “needs to be monitored closely” but the risk to humans remained low. Experts say the virus would probably require more than one or two changes for human-to-human transmission to be a real risk, but the impacts could be huge. There have been nearly 870 cases of bird flu in humans over the past 20 years and 457 were fatal, according to the WHO.

The virus is also devastating wild bird populations across the globe, meaning it is reaching places previously never exposed to such diseases. This means they can carry it to the most pristine parts of the planet, possibly spreading it into other endangered species.

Brown said: “I think it is really quite a worry that the virus has already reached so far down into South America. And we have to consider that there are definitely risks for some biodiversity in terms of Antarctica. It really is a concern to think that it can end up in a place like Antarctica.”

People are advised not to touch dead or sick wild animals and to instead report them to local and national authorities, which are monitoring the situation.

Contributor

Phoebe Weston

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Bird flu: access to Ernest Shackleton’s grave ‘blocked by dead seals’
The H5N1 virus reached the region late last year and is killing wildlife, with witnesses spotting numerous seal corpses on South Georgia island

Phoebe Weston

14, Mar, 2024 @5:00 AM

Article image
More than 50,000 wild birds in UK killed by avian flu – double previous estimates
H5N1 bird flu may lead to extinction of species as data revealed by Guardian shows worst losses in decades

Phoebe Weston and Sophie Kevany

05, May, 2023 @7:00 AM

Article image
Mass deaths of elephant seals recorded as bird flu sweeps across the Antarctic
Researchers warn of one of ‘largest ecological disasters of modern times’ if the highly contagious disease reaches penguin colonies

Phoebe Weston

08, Dec, 2023 @5:00 AM

Article image
Plans to make H7N9 bird flu virus more virulent in high-security tests

Scientists say genetically modifying the H7N9 virus in the lab will help drive efforts to develop pandemic drugs and vaccines

Ian Sample, science correspondent

07, Aug, 2013 @5:00 PM

Article image
Bird flu researchers get green light to continue work on engineered virus
A voluntary moratorium on research involving lab-created versions of the H5N1 bird flu virus has been lifted

Alok Jha, science correspondent

23, Jan, 2013 @6:02 PM

Article image
Polar bear dies from bird flu as H5N1 spreads across globe
Current outbreak, which started in 2021, is estimated to have killed millions of wild birds and thousands of mammals globally

Phoebe Weston

02, Jan, 2024 @5:37 PM

Article image
Volunteers hired for clinical trial of Covid vaccine made in Scotland
Valneva hopes to seek approval as soon as summer, paving way for potential booster shots in autumn

Ian Sample Science editor

25, Apr, 2021 @11:01 PM

Article image
‘Cautious optimism’ as penguins test positive for bird flu but show no symptoms
Asymptomatic cases may seem reassuring for the penguins, but scientists fear they could act as ‘Trojan horses’ for other species

Phoebe Weston

26, Mar, 2024 @7:00 AM

Article image
Covid vaccine used on apes at San Diego zoo trialled on mink
Experimental animal jabs could stop spillover back to humans, says firm behind vaccines for primates

Patrick Greenfield

23, Mar, 2021 @11:30 AM

Article image
Scientists concerned at H7N9 bird flu outbreak that has killed 24 people

Virus is causing severe disease in China, killing a fifth of those it infects

Sarah Boseley, health editor

01, May, 2013 @2:36 PM