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First Bird Flu Deaths Reported In Antarctic Penguins


The familiar black-and-white birds are facing numerous threats, including climate change, pollution and commercial fishing. Three Antarctic penguin species — emperor penguins, southern rockhopper penguins and macaroni penguins — are listed as vulnerable or near threatened.

Before H5N1 arrived in the Antarctic region last fall, highly pathogenic bird flu viruses had never been documented in the area before. That means that the penguins are likely to have little existing immunity. And because they breed in large, crowded colonies, once one penguin is infected, the virus could spread rapidly, causing mass mortalities. (As the virus spread through South America last year, Chile reported the deaths of thousands of Humboldt penguins.)

The extent of the virus’s spread in Antarctic penguin populations remains unclear.

In the Falkland Islands, some gentoo penguins appeared to be sick or lethargic, and a small number showed neurological symptoms, before they were found dead, Ms. Heathman said. The virus has not yet been confirmed in any other local penguin species, she said, but testing of rockhopper penguins is underway.

At least one suspected case has also been reported in king penguins in South Georgia, another British territory, according to the Antarctic Wildlife Health Network, which is part of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research.

That report was based on a single dead king penguin, and investigators have not seen a spike in penguin deaths at that location, said Laura Willis, the chief executive of the government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. “We are monitoring the situation across the islands,” she said.

The virus, which first emerged in 2020, has taken an unprecedented toll on wild birds and mammals. After the virus was detected at the tip of South America last year, OFFLU, a global network of flu experts, warned that the pathogen could spread to Antarctica next.

The Antarctic region provides critical breeding territory for more than 100 million birds as well as seals, sea lions and other marine mammals. If the virus arrived in the region, its impact on those animals “could be immense,” OFFLU said in a statement last August.

Just two months later, the virus was detected in brown skuas in South Georgia, the first cases in the region. Since then, infections have been confirmed in numerous other bird species, as well as in elephant and fur seals. These marine mammals also breed in large colonies, and they suffered major losses as the virus spread through South America, where tens of thousands of seals and sea lions were reported dead. Scientists worry that the same fate may befall Antarctica’s seals as the virus spreads.

Infections have not yet been reported on the Antarctic mainland, although experts have said that the virus may already be spreading there undetected.


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