Lancashire and Cumbria to have strict bird flu measures due to heightened risk

Most of England will be free from the bird flu measures soon, except for Lancashire, Merseyside and Cumbria
Most of England will be free from the bird flu measures soon, except for Lancashire, Merseyside and Cumbria

The UK Chief Veterinary Officer has confirmed measures currently in place to reduce the risk of Avian Influenza will be lifted, but some areas will remain due to heightened risk.

The Government is to lift the Avian Flu Prevention Zones and the ban on poultry gatherings as planned across most of England from 15 May 2017.

However, they will remain in place in targeted areas of Lancashire, Cumbria and Merseyside following evidence of heightened risk in these areas.

The latest risk assessment published by Defra finds overall risk across England has not increased, but there is a heightened risk in parts of Lancashire, Cumbria and Merseyside, where recent confirmed cases in the Wyre district provide evidence that infection is still either circulating in wild resident birds or present in the environment.

To minimise the risk of disease spreading in this area, a new, targeted Avian Influenza Prevention Zone (AIPZ) will be introduced covering the districts of Barrow-in-Furness, South Lakeland, Lancaster, Blackpool, Wyre, Fylde, Preston, Sefton, West Lancashire, South Ribble and Chorley.

This will replace the England-wide AIPZ that we previously announced would be lifted from 15 May.

Prevention measures

The new localised AIPZ will require keepers to continue to observe existing mandatory disease prevention measures such as minimising movement in and out of bird enclosures, cleaning footwear, keeping areas where birds live clean and tidy and feeding birds indoors.

Poultry gatherings in the localised AIPZ area will continue to be banned, and keepers from the area will not be able to take their poultry to gatherings elsewhere.

The risk in these parts of Lancashire, Cumbria and Merseyside is considered higher because the region is home to significant wild waterfowl populations and there have been previous outbreaks of H5N8 throughout this area.

Recent cases in backyard flocks provide evidence that infection is still either circulating in wild resident birds or present in the environment.

An AIPZ requiring keepers to observe strict disease prevention measures and a ban on poultry gatherings have been in place across England since December 2016.

From 15 May 2017, keepers across most of England will no longer be required by law to follow these measures.