HomeHealthAustralia Detects First Suspected Mainland H5 Bird Flu Case

Australia Detects First Suspected Mainland H5 Bird Flu Case

Australia has detected it’s first suspected mainland case of H5N1 bird flu in a remote part of the country’s ​southwest.

According to the state Agriculture Minister, Jackie Jarvis, a migratory sea bird known as a brown ‌skua found in Western Australia’s Cape Le Grand National Park tested positive for avian influenza, and further testing is being conducted to confirm the strain.

“We ​are taking the suspected case of H5 bird flu seriously. If ​this is confirmed H5 bird incursion, there will be a rapid ⁠and coordinated national response,” Javis said.

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The virulent strain of H5 bird flu has spread through ​wild bird and mammal populations since 2021, killing millions, infecting poultry and dairy farms ​and even some farmworkers.

Australia is the only continent without a confirmed mainland case of the deadly strain. H5 was confirmed on Heard Island, a sub-Antarctic Australian territory in late 2025.

The country has been ​preparing for the arrival of H5N1 bird flu by tightening biosecurity at farms, ​testing shore birds for disease, vaccinating vulnerable species and war-gaming response plans.

“While, if confirmed, this would ‌obviously ⁠be a very concerning development, Australia has spent the past few years preparing for this likelihood,” Environment Minister, Murray Watt said in a statement.

Jarvis said results confirming whether the now-deceased brown skua had contracted H5 bird flu is expected on Saturday.

She said that ​another sick bird, a ​giant petrol, was ⁠also found in the same area and is being tested for influenza.

A wildlife veterinarian and associate professor at Adelaide ​University, Wayne Boardman said the virus could devastate Australia’s native wildlife.

“This strain ​of bird ⁠flu has caused huge die-offs of birds and sea mammals. My concerns are that if the H5N1 avian flu virus is confirmed, it will pose a huge ⁠risk ​to some of our more endangered shorebirds, some of ​our coastal raptors, and our precious, unique, endemic and endangered Australian sea lions, whose population is precarious,” he added.

 

Reuters

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