Why Is Bird Flu Getting Worse Now?
The virus is running amok around the world. Possible explanations include an enhanced ability to replicate or infect more bird species.
Avian influenza is on the rampage. In the past few days,
both France and the United Kingdom have announced new biosafety measures aimed
at curbing the swiftly spreading illness. Dozens of infected penguins in South
Africa have died recently, and on Wednesday South Korea reported its first case
in six months. In the United States, the disease is driving up prices for
turkey a month before Thanksgiving, in which the bird plays a central part. The
prevalence of the disease is the highest on record in Europe, and the number of
domesticated birds that have died over the past year is approaching a record in
the United States. So why is bird flu so bad right now?
The bird flu that is currently running amok in Europe and
North America is predominantly caused by a strain called H5N1 — one of several
that is classified as a highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) virus, because
of its high death toll in poultry.
Europe, Asia and Africa have had many flare-ups of HPAI
viruses since the late nineteenth century. For about a century, outbreaks were
limited mainly to poultry, and the culling of affected flocks usually kept the
disease from spreading widely in wild birds.
Virus with a difference
But since the early 2000s, researchers have noted a
sustained spread of avian flu among wild birds. Over the past year, this
transmission has increased drastically. The disease also seems to be spreading
to mammals more frequently. These unprecedented patterns of transmission mean
that “something is quite different about this virus this go around”, says
Rebecca Poulson, a wildlife-disease researcher at the University of Georgia in
Athens.
The situation is especially unusual for North America. An
HPAI strain has been detected in wild birds there only once before, between
2014 and 2016, after wild birds spread the disease from Eurasia to Alaska. That
outbreak led to the deaths of more than 50 million domestic birds in the United
States alone, at a cost of US$3 billion. But then the virus “seemed to sort of
vanish”, says Andy Ramey, a wildlife geneticist at the US Geological Survey
Alaska Science Center in Anchorage.
In December 2021, the highly pathogenic H5N1 strain popped
up again in North America, this time in the east. Researchers expect viruses to
make the short journey across the Bering Strait to western North America, but
“we weren’t really expecting this one to sort of sneak in the back door”,
Poulson says. Since then, the disease has been circulating uncontrollably in
wild birds rather than remaining mostly contained to poultry farms, where
cramped conditions can promote viral spread. In both Europe and the United
States, the high number of infected wild birds might make it easier for the
virus to spill over into domestic flocks, she notes.
Poulson says it was inevitable that wild birds would carry
an HPAI strain to North America again one day. “It was going to happen,"
she says. "And it just happened to be now.”
Mutations matter
No one knows why this outbreak hasn’t fizzled out, but
virologist Louise Moncla at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia says
that there are a few leading theories. One is that genetic mutations have
increased the virus’s ability to replicate, allowing it to spread more
efficiently than previous strains could. Another is that mutations have allowed
the virus to infect a broader range of bird species than previous strains were
capable of. Researchers are testing these ideas, but so far there are “more
questions than there are answers”, says Moncla.
This strain of HPAI also seems to have developed a
propensity for jumping to mammals, such as seals, bobcats and skunks, although
there’s no evidence it can spread from one individual mammal to another. Human
cases are rare, even in Europe, where frequent poultry outbreaks have created
opportunities for people to become infected. This gives Poulson hope that the
virus won’t evolve to infect people more readily, but “the elephant in the
room: we don’t know”, she says.
Maybe here to stay
When, if ever, will this outbreak die down? The coming weeks
are likely to see many cases, Ramey says, because birds are congregating to
migrate together. The infection numbers might go down outside the migratory
season, but “I don’t know if the underlying situation is truly getting better”,
he says.
Poulson thinks it is likely that the virus has passed the
point at which it could have disappeared from North America again. “There’s no
sign that this virus is being suppressed or held back at all,” she says.
10.1038/d41586-022-03322-2
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