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DNR launches voluntary program to test ducks for avian influenza

WILLMAR -- Minnesota Department of Natural Resources field testing staff will offer voluntary testing to waterfowl hunters in seven western and central Minnesota counties when the waterfowl season opens this weekend. No cases of avian influenza h...

WILLMAR - Minnesota Department of Natural Resources field testing staff will offer voluntary testing to waterfowl hunters in seven western and central Minnesota counties when the waterfowl season opens this weekend. No cases of avian influenza have been detected in Minnesota ducks or geese since the outbreak of the flu in the state in March, and the Department of Health assures hunters that there are no food safety concerns with avian influenza.
The DNR said in a news release that it will have field testing stations in Kandiyohi, Meeker, Morrison, Pope, Stearns, Swift and Todd counties. Staff in these areas will solicit hunters to volunteer their birds for sampling, which involves taking a quick swab from each bird. Since there are no food safety concerns even with a positive test, hunters can immediately take home their birds.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture recommends cooking whole duck or goose to a safe minimum internal temperature of 165 degrees Fahrenheit.
“These efforts will help us determine the prevalence of avian influenza in ducks,” said Lou Cornicelli, DNR wildlife research manager, in the release. “The information learned will be widely shared with wildlife management and agriculture agencies and organizations.”
Crews will be stationed at the following locations:
• Lake Osakis.
• Middle Fork Crow River, north of New London.
• Mud Lake state water access site, just west of the Burbank Wildlife Management Area (WMA) near the intersection of county roads 128 and 33.
• Dietrich Lange WMA at the Lake Calhoun public access.
• Yarmon WMA.
• Rice-Skunk WMA.
• Big Rice Lake public boat access.
• Kobliska WMA boat access on Long Lake.
• Quistorff WMA.
• Other hunting areas around Spicer, Pennock, Sunburg, Greenwald and Lake Lillian.
The voluntary testing, which is designed to sample 800 birds during the first two weeks of the season, is a joint effort of the DNR, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Wildlife Services and the U.S. Geological Survey.
DNR staff successfully conducted similar surveillance from 2006-2010 and Cornicelli said hunter participation is essential for this effort to be successful.
The sampling of harvested birds this fall will supplement information collected on wild birds since the outbreak began last winter.
The DNR has:
• Collected more than 3,000 fecal samples from a variety of waterfowl species.
• Sampled more than 600 Canada geese as part of the annual goose banding project.
• Sampled more than 100 dead birds that were reported to the DNR.
• Sampled nearly 200 ducks as part of the summer duck banding project.
For more information, visit the DNR avian flu Web page at www.mndnr.gov/ai .

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