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Tracking Bird Flu Through Poop In Places No One's Looking

Tracking Bird Flu Through Poop In Places No One's Looking

Forbes17 hours ago

An egret flying from the lake in Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka, on September 23, 2023. Researchers report ... More finding avian influenza in guano from wild birds throughout the Indian Ocean and Oceania. (Photo by Thilina Kaluthotage/NurPhoto via Getty Images)
In a bid to get ahead of the next global flu pandemic, scientists have turned to a surprising tool: bird poop. In remote parts of the Indian Ocean and Oceania — regions often neglected during global disease surveillance — researchers are using droppings from wild birds to map the spread of avian influenza viruses with pandemic potential.
A new study published in Nature Communications analyzed more than 27,000 guano samples from countries including Somalia, the Maldives, Sri Lanka, Madagascar, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea. The findings reveal widespread circulation of highly pathogenic influenza strains, particularly H5N1, in areas where human and wildlife health infrastructure is limited. More than 99% of the detected H5 viruses carried genetic markers linked to high virulence. The early detection of viral RNA in wild bird droppings, sometimes preceding official poultry outbreaks, suggests that unconventional surveillance in these biologically rich but infrastructurally sparse areas could play a larger role in pandemic risk mitigation. For agriculture, biosecurity, and pharmaceutical preparedness, guano-based monitoring could expand where meaningful early warning may be possible, particularly where current systems fall short.
Guano-based monitoring offers several advantages. It's non-invasive, doesn't require handling or trapping birds, and can be deployed in both ecologically sensitive areas and regions where traditional surveillance is difficult. Fresh droppings often contain viral RNA, enabling researchers to recover full genomes and assess the pathogenic potential of circulating strains. Whether in remote island roosts or along migratory corridors near commercial farms, bird droppings may offer a scalable substrate for global influenza surveillance.
The data reveal a pattern of geographically extensive viral circulation. Of the more than 27,000 guano samples analyzed, just over 1% tested positive for avian influenza RNA. H5N1, the same subtype now circulating among wild birds and mammals in the Americas and affecting dairy herds and poultry operations in the United States, was the most frequently detected strain. It was especially common in samples from islands in Sri Lanka and the Maldives, where it accounted for up to 85.7% of detections. Among the H5-positive samples, the vast majority carried polybasic cleavage site motifs, molecular features associated with high virulence and the capacity for systemic infection in birds. H5N1 sequences collected from bird droppings in Somalia's Bajuni Islands, Yemen's Socotra Archipelago, and the Maldivian island of Maakandoodhoo carried the H275Y mutation in the neuraminidase gene, a genetic change that is associated with reduced effectiveness of oseltamivir, one of the limited antiviral options currently used to treat severe influenza infections.
Relative frequencies of highly pathogenic and low pathogenicity subtypes among avian influenza ... More positive samples collected in guano from 2021 to 2023. Bars are labeled by the molecular motifs associated with the hemagglutinin cleavage site, a key determinant of pathogenicity. The pattern of amino acids Data from Wanniagama et al. (2025): https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-59322-z.
Data from Tanguingui Island in the Philippines suggest that H5N2 virus was present in wild birds as early as two years before the country's first confirmed outbreak in backyard ducks in November 2024, suggesting that there is an important role for guano-based sampling in complementing existing surveillance systems, offering a path toward more anticipatory One Health approaches to protecting both human and animal health.
Influenza viruses in wild birds pose a well-documented risk to human health, poultry production, and even conservation. As deforestation, mining, and displacement drive people into once-remote ecosystems, the risk of spillover is growing, the authors suggest. Governments, poultry producers, pharmaceutical developers, and global health agencies might take note: guano-based surveillance offers a practical tool for identifying emerging threats before they escalate into outbreaks.
Monitoring bird droppings may not sound high-tech, but it could help stop the next pandemic before it begins.

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Toronto Public Health seeking person who 'physically handled' bat that may have rabies
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Tracking Bird Flu Through Poop In Places No One's Looking
Tracking Bird Flu Through Poop In Places No One's Looking

Forbes

time17 hours ago

  • Forbes

Tracking Bird Flu Through Poop In Places No One's Looking

An egret flying from the lake in Anuradhapura, Sri Lanka, on September 23, 2023. Researchers report ... More finding avian influenza in guano from wild birds throughout the Indian Ocean and Oceania. (Photo by Thilina Kaluthotage/NurPhoto via Getty Images) In a bid to get ahead of the next global flu pandemic, scientists have turned to a surprising tool: bird poop. In remote parts of the Indian Ocean and Oceania — regions often neglected during global disease surveillance — researchers are using droppings from wild birds to map the spread of avian influenza viruses with pandemic potential. A new study published in Nature Communications analyzed more than 27,000 guano samples from countries including Somalia, the Maldives, Sri Lanka, Madagascar, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea. The findings reveal widespread circulation of highly pathogenic influenza strains, particularly H5N1, in areas where human and wildlife health infrastructure is limited. More than 99% of the detected H5 viruses carried genetic markers linked to high virulence. The early detection of viral RNA in wild bird droppings, sometimes preceding official poultry outbreaks, suggests that unconventional surveillance in these biologically rich but infrastructurally sparse areas could play a larger role in pandemic risk mitigation. For agriculture, biosecurity, and pharmaceutical preparedness, guano-based monitoring could expand where meaningful early warning may be possible, particularly where current systems fall short. Guano-based monitoring offers several advantages. It's non-invasive, doesn't require handling or trapping birds, and can be deployed in both ecologically sensitive areas and regions where traditional surveillance is difficult. Fresh droppings often contain viral RNA, enabling researchers to recover full genomes and assess the pathogenic potential of circulating strains. Whether in remote island roosts or along migratory corridors near commercial farms, bird droppings may offer a scalable substrate for global influenza surveillance. The data reveal a pattern of geographically extensive viral circulation. Of the more than 27,000 guano samples analyzed, just over 1% tested positive for avian influenza RNA. H5N1, the same subtype now circulating among wild birds and mammals in the Americas and affecting dairy herds and poultry operations in the United States, was the most frequently detected strain. It was especially common in samples from islands in Sri Lanka and the Maldives, where it accounted for up to 85.7% of detections. Among the H5-positive samples, the vast majority carried polybasic cleavage site motifs, molecular features associated with high virulence and the capacity for systemic infection in birds. H5N1 sequences collected from bird droppings in Somalia's Bajuni Islands, Yemen's Socotra Archipelago, and the Maldivian island of Maakandoodhoo carried the H275Y mutation in the neuraminidase gene, a genetic change that is associated with reduced effectiveness of oseltamivir, one of the limited antiviral options currently used to treat severe influenza infections. Relative frequencies of highly pathogenic and low pathogenicity subtypes among avian influenza ... More positive samples collected in guano from 2021 to 2023. Bars are labeled by the molecular motifs associated with the hemagglutinin cleavage site, a key determinant of pathogenicity. The pattern of amino acids Data from Wanniagama et al. (2025): Data from Tanguingui Island in the Philippines suggest that H5N2 virus was present in wild birds as early as two years before the country's first confirmed outbreak in backyard ducks in November 2024, suggesting that there is an important role for guano-based sampling in complementing existing surveillance systems, offering a path toward more anticipatory One Health approaches to protecting both human and animal health. Influenza viruses in wild birds pose a well-documented risk to human health, poultry production, and even conservation. As deforestation, mining, and displacement drive people into once-remote ecosystems, the risk of spillover is growing, the authors suggest. Governments, poultry producers, pharmaceutical developers, and global health agencies might take note: guano-based surveillance offers a practical tool for identifying emerging threats before they escalate into outbreaks. Monitoring bird droppings may not sound high-tech, but it could help stop the next pandemic before it begins.

Rare colour footage of extinct Australian animal seen again after 90 years
Rare colour footage of extinct Australian animal seen again after 90 years

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Rare colour footage of extinct Australian animal seen again after 90 years

An extinct Australian animal can once again be seen bounding across a paddock after rare 16mm film was digitised by the National Film and Sound Archive (NFSA) this week. Taken almost 90 years ago, the clip contains the only known colour footage of a living Toolache wallaby, a species relentlessly hunted to extinction. While the marsupials were once common, the film itself shows just one female fenced in a paddock. She was likely the last living representative of her species when the footage was shot in 1936. Bernard Cotton, from the Field Naturalists Society of South Australia, would have understood the animal's significance as he travelled to film her at Robe, a coastal town located more than 340km south of Adelaide. The trip was in October, just one month after the last-known Tasmanian tiger died at a zoo in Hobart. 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The film, Toolache Wallaby in 1936 by BC Cotton, is owned by the Field Naturalists and it has granted Yahoo News permission to obtain and use it for this article. A digital copy of the film has been held at the South Australian Museum for 20 years, but that version is entirely black and white. What's incredible about the newly digitised NFSA copy is that it contains 34 seconds of colour footage at the end. Few people alive today had likely seen the colour version until it was removed from a canister and digitised in June. In black and white, it can be hard for modern viewers to imagine what it was like to see a living animal that has since gone extinct. In 2021, the NFSA engaged experts in Paris to painstakingly colourise footage showing a Tasmanian tiger, but luckily, this wasn't required for the Toolache wallaby. As NFSA technicians stared at the canister, they were initially unsure of the film's condition. Its film services team lead Dave McGrouther explained older 16mm film is made from diacetate, a material that shrinks and warps over time. 'The reality of working with film is that it's all deteriorating. The controlled storage conditions we have slow that down to a great extent, but there are occasions where we come across a film and it simply can't be saved,' he told Yahoo News. The first five minutes of the Toolache wallaby film, which are in black and white, were in reasonably good condition. And while the colour section had deteriorated and turned a deep magenta in colour, it still helps viewers imagine what this fascinating creature was like to see in real life. Anyone visiting the South Australian Museum can see a taxidermy specimen on display, but watching one alive on film, moving through its environment, adds another dimension of excitement. 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'Once a species is confined to only zoo enclosures, survival of that species may be too late,' he warned. Love Australia's weird and wonderful environment? 🐊🦘😳 Get our new newsletter showcasing the week's best stories.

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