OMAHA, Neb. (AP) β A bird flu outbreak in the U.S. that led to the deaths of more than 40 million chickens and turkeys and contributed to a spike in egg and meat prices appears to be waning, but experts caution the virus hasnβt disappeared and worry another surge could take hold this fall.
The number of birds culled to limit its spread dropped from a peak of almost 21 million in March to less than 800,000 in May. However, more than 2 million birds have been killed already this month after infections were discovered at two large farms in Colorado.
βThe numbers in the dashboard do tell a story, but we are not ready to say the outbreak is winding down,β said Richard Coker, a spokesman for the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service division of the Department of Agriculture. βWe remain vigilant and encourage producers to continue to practice strong biosecurity.β
Some state and industry officials are optimistic that the outbreak is ending, although no one is quite ready to relax.
Iowa Agriculture Secretary Mike Naig said the virus still poses a risk because more cases are being reported, but that βit really does feel like weβre on the tail end of it for this year.β
When a case of the highly pathogenic virus is found, officials kill the entire flock to limit its spread. The virus doesnβt discriminate between backyard flocks and massive egg farms; flocks of all sizes have been infected.
Iowa, the nationβs leader in egg production, was by far the hardest hit state with 13.4 million birds lost. No cases have been reported in the state since May 4, likely because migrating wild birds, which are blamed for spreading the virus, have moved out of Iowa.
Nebraska lost nearly 4.9 million birds, Pennsylvania lost 4.2 million and Colorado saw 3.6 million birds killed. Minnesota and Wisconsin each lost about 3 million.
An outbreak in 2015, when 50 million turkeys and chickens were killed, remains the most expensive animal health disaster in U.S. history. The government spent nearly $1 billion then to deal with infected birds, clean up barns and compensate farmers. The USDA has so far approved $793 million to cover costs this year.
National Turkey Federation spokeswoman Beth Breeding said the government payments "keep those losses from being catastrophic,β but they don't cover everything. For example, farmers lose income because they canβt raise birds while their properties are being disinfected.
Food prices have increased 10% overall this year, exceeding the 8.6% inflation reported last month. Egg prices soared the most, jumping 32%, while poultry prices are up nearly 17%. But agricultural economists say that while the bird flu outbreak contributed, spikes in the cost of feed, fuel and labor are much bigger factors.
It didnβt help that outbreak peaked just as demand for eggs was highest around Easter, driving prices higher.
But a relatively small proportion of the nationwide flock was affected. The 40 million birds killed represent only 6% of the chickens raised to produce eggs, 2.5% of turkeys and less than 1% of the chickens raised for meat.
Economists expect egg and meat prices to ease this summer as farms are able build back their flocks.
βI think that there is going to start being some relief," said Jada Thompson, an agricultural economist at the University of Arkansas.
The summer heat should help kill off the disease, but experts worry that the latest version of the virus may be hardy enough to survive the season, leading to a new outbreak when wild birds migrate later in the year.
βWe may have an even bigger peak this year in the fall, who knows?β University of Georgia researcher David Stallknecht said. βThe honest answer is that we do not know what the future holds, but the reporting decline in commercial poultry cases is encouraging.β
The prospects for a bird flu vaccine are uncertain; foreign markets are reluctant to import meat from inoculated birds, and vaccination can hide the presence of the virus meaning farmers would have to spend more to increase testing of their flocks. And vaccinated birds can still fall sick, just like vaccinated humans.
βI personally do not see vaccine as something thatβs going to be used in the United States,β said John Clifford, the former U.S. chief veterinary officer who oversaw the USDA response to the 2015 outbreak. βCountries that donβt export may feel different. We canβt afford to lose those markets.β
There is only so much farmers can do to limit the spread of bird flu. Farmworkers already usually have to shower and change clothes before they enter a barn, and tools for each barn are kept separate.
Emily Metz, CEO of the American Egg Board trade group, said some farmers have invested heavily in combatting the virus, including upgrading ventilation systems and installing laser light systems to ward off wild birds.
βIf it does linger or come back, weβre prepared. Weβre not letting our guard down,β Metz said. βThe improvements our producers have made in terms of biosecurity are part of their everyday business.β