[Vision2020] Alaskan Birds At Risk?
Chris Storhok
cstorhok at co.fairbanks.ak.us
Fri Mar 10 13:03:24 PST 2006
Donovan,
Yea right, meanwhile we can complete the railroad to Russia....
BTW, I am more than willing to defend Steven's appropriations requests and
use of public dollars, the man is not an idiot.
Bush, on the other hand....
Enjoy the weekend,
Chris
_____
From: Donovan Arnold [mailto:donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com]
Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006 11:51 AM
To: Chris Storhok; 'J Ford'; vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: RE: [Vision2020] Alaskan Birds At Risk?
Chris,
Maybe Ted Stevens can propose we put all the infected birds on an island;
build a bridge to the island, then destroy the bridge so the infection does
not spread to other birds and people. This policy would fit well with past
policies and legislation proposed by President Bush and Senator Stevens as
well as their use of public dollars.
Take Care,
_DJA
Chris Storhok <cstorhok at co.fairbanks.ak.us> wrote:
J,
The spread of the avian flu has been on our platter since the disease began
to spread throughout Asia. Fairbanks is central to major migration routes
between Asia to North America and we fully expect that sometime in the next
couple of months that avian flu will strike here. Over 1 million ducks,
geese, and swans land on the north edge of town at Creamer's field each
spring. Naturally our concern is not only for the health of the birds but
for the health of the 20,000 humans who live within a mile of the site.
Senator Stevens has tried to convince the federal government to establish a
testing facility in Alaska, unfortunately the political game of "anything
but Alaska" that started with the "bridges to nowhere" controversy has
really diminished the chance for such a facility to open here; the ultimate
cost of this really stupid game is the nation's inability to stop this
disease in Alaska. We continue to ask for help but we are not getting it.
The reality of this situation is that if H5N1 were to mutate in birds in
Alaska and really hit humans hard, our federal government's response will be
similar to Hurricane Katrina - way too little and way too late.
My employer is working on independent plans to stop the disease
since we know that the feds cannot be counted on to help; hopefully,
measures that we are developing will help, but who knows.
I will keep you informed as this situation develops.
Chris
-----Original Message-----
From: vision2020-bounces at moscow.com [mailto:vision2020-bounces at moscow.com]
On Behalf Of J Ford
Sent: Sunday, March 05, 2006 9:44 PM
To: vision2020 at moscow.com
Subject: [Vision2020] Alaskan Birds At Risk?
Anyone else see this? Chirs? Kinda close to home.
Hunters watch for sick birds
Remote Alaska villages are on the frontlines in tracking avian flu virus
By ANNE SUTTON
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Watching the flock: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service bird biologist Brian
McCaffery conducts shore bird research in southwest Alaska. The federal
government is enlisting Alaskans in remote villages to help watch for signs
of a deadly flu virus in migratory birds .
James Active Jr. may live in one of the more remote areas of North America,
but that hasn't kept him from tracking the path of the avian flu virus on
its march across the globe.
A Yupik Eskimo from Kipnuk, a Native village of 600 people on the edge of
the Bering Sea, he follows the news on satellite television: reports of
poultry killed or culled en masse in Asia, a scattering of human deaths
among poultry workers, fallen swans and ducks in France and, most recently,
a dead cat in Germany.
Thousands of miles from these outbreaks, he sounds resigned to the eventual
appearance of the disease on his turf.
"We hear about it being overseas in different countries but somewhere down
the line, I'm sure it will end up this way too," he said.
A subsistence hunter, Active depends on birds to feed his family through the
spring until salmon return to local rivers in June. Like many others, he
shrugs off his nagging worries about the virus.
He can't afford to give up hunting birds, he said, even as a massive effort
gears up to find out if the disease has gained entry into North America
through his vast backyard.
While no roads link Kipnuk and dozens of neighboring villages to the rest of
the world, the skies are thoroughfares for migrating waterfowl and
shorebirds. Come spring, they nest by the millions in the surrounding delta
of the mighty Yukon and Kuskokwim rivers - a broad flat plain covering
millions of acres that is crisscrossed by rivers and streams and dotted with
countless lakes and sloughs and ponds.
It's considered the crossroads for birds migrating between Asia and North
America.
So far, the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu, found in migratory birds in
other parts of the world, has not been detected in North America. And in an
effort to make sure the virus has not arrived, the federal government plans
to spend $7.4 million this year to test wild birds, focusing on the vast
tundra and small isolated villages of Western Alaska.
"If all goes according to plan, we'll have tested well over 15,000 birds" in
Alaska, said Deborah Rocque, avian influenza coordinator for the region's
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "We feel pretty confident that if it is
here, our sampling plan will be able to detect it."
While most birds will be tested live, several thousand hunter-killed birds
also will be tested.
That will require enlisting the help of local subsistence hunters. They'll
be asked to bring their catch to a check station where technicians will swab
the bird for a sample of fecal matter.
Even though test results won't be available for another two weeks to two
months, Active is willing to help. He and other residents of the delta's
cash-poor villages depend on the spring migration - birds like cackling
geese, king eiders, sandhill cranes, green and blue-winged teal - to add a
boost of protein to their diet.
"Without (subsistence) we'd have to depend on chicken and turkey. That's
expensive," said Active. Food prices in remote villages are 2 1/2 to three
times what they are in urban areas.
"And wild bird is better than chicken and turkey," Active added.
Michael Rearden, manager of the Yukon-Delta National Wildlife Refuge, said
the benefits of good fresh food far outweigh the more uncertain risks of
bird flu.
"People need to be cautious and reasonable about (handling the birds) but
this is an important food source out here and I'd hate to see people
avoiding them," he said.
Still, the news from abroad is making some people nervous. Radio station
KYUK in the hub village of Bethel recently aired a call-in show on avian
flu, and heard from villagers around the region. For example, they wanted to
know if boiling the birds would kill the virus, and if they should worry
about bird droppings on the wild berries they pick.
Wildlife and health experts hammered home home the point that humans have
little to fear. So far the only cases of human sickness have occured among
those in very close daily contact with infected poultry. Callers were told
their chances of picking up the virus from contaminated berries are next to
nil and their food is safe as long as it's properly cooked, even if the
virus is present.
Yet the jitters are not surprising. Elders remember the stories of the flu
pandemic of 1918 that wiped out entire households in some villages. The
virus, believed to have been carried to Alaska by soldiers returning from
World War I, was a bird flu that mutated into a virus that spread easily
among humans.
Whether today's virus will follow the same mutations is still unknown and
while experts seek to allay local concerns, most hunters plan to head out
this spring and harvest their subsistence foods.
Myron Naneng, president of the Association of Village Council Presidents,
said his organization will work with state and federal agencies on the
sampling program and keep villagers informed about the relative risks of
avian flu.
And while he says it will be discussed at the association's mid-year
conference in March, it won't be the main topic. He said people are more
worried about two large mine projects planned for the area.
Bird flu "is just another major issue that needs to be worked on," he said.
J :]
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serving the communities of the Palouse since 1994.
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