Could be months before sanctuary reopens after bird flu :: WRAL.com

2022-09-10 20:05:48 By : Mr. Michael Zhang

If you previously used a social network to login to WRAL.com, click the “Forgot your password” link to reset your password.

Chatham leaders, schools, residents ready for the population boom that new companies will bring

From Triangle to Triad: Expected Wolfspeed chip plant adds to new 'economic corridor' in NC

Wolfspeed announces $5 billion investment in Chatham County, largest in NC history

Rainy, stormy weather impacts weekend plans

Tracking the tropics: Hurricane Earl could send rip currents to NC this weekend

California avoids outages after day of grid-straining heat

WRAL 5 on Your Side helps Raleigh man save nearly $3K on energy bill, claims he spent 18 hours trying to sort out bill

WRAL 5 On Your Side saves thousands of dollars for Duke Energy customer

On the Record: One-on-one with candidates for the Wake County sheriff's race

No. 18 NC State routs Charleston Southern 55-3 to improve to 2-0

MLB set to announce pitch clocks, shift limits for 2023

BYU says 'no evidence' of racial slurs; Duke stands by player who says she experienced targeted racism

Only on WRAL: Wolfspeed CEO describes recession-proof tech to be built in Chatham County

IRS to refund late-filing penalties for 2019 and 2020 returns

Gov. Roy Cooper, Wolfspeed executives talk new Chatham County plant

SERGE SCHMEMANN: A woman who embodied the myth of the good monarch

Editorial: Legislators must heed Sec. Kinsley's plea. Expand Medicaid now!

Editorial: If a tax break is good for N.C. corporations, don't treat student loans differently

Restaurant Ratings: Bowl of Pho, Waffle House and Brixx Wood Fired Pizza

IRS to refund late-filing penalties for 2019 and 2020 returns

WRAL 5 on Your Side helps Raleigh man save nearly $3K on energy bill, claims he spent 18 hours trying to sort out bill

Racial disparities in healthcare: Black citizens make up 60% of monkeypox cases in NC, but less than 27% of vaccinations

People with HIV make up more than half monkeypox cases in NC

Family says bullying contributed to Wendell eighth grader's death by suicide. Here are warning signs to look for.

Music, beer, mural celebrate Dix Park at Hopscotch day party

Foodie news: M Sushi opens Cary location

Luke Combs announces Bank of America Stadium show, world tour

Daytime Pick 3 and Pick 4 Drawing

Cumberland County shooting leaves 1 dead, 1 seriously injured

18 NC counties are under alert, including Cumberland, Harnett, Moore, Lee, and Hoke counties. Details

Published: 2022-08-30 18:32:24 Updated: 2022-08-30 18:32:34

Posted August 30, 2022 6:32 p.m. EDT

By JANET McCONNAUGHEY, Associated Press

It could be months before a Georgia animal sanctuary reopens after being closed by bird flu that killed wild vultures roosting there, part of an outbreak that has led to 40.3 million deaths in commercial and backyard flocks nationwide.

A note on the Noah’s Ark website Tuesday said the sanctuary, which houses more than 1,500 animals in Locust Grove, will be closed until Sept. 30.

However, the state veterinarian, Dr. Janemarie Hennebelle, said in a video Friday that birds there will be quarantined for at least five months. Just over 100 were euthanized because they were at high risk for the virus, she said.

Noah’s Ark said euthanized birds included peacocks, peahens, emus, ostrich, Guinea fowl, chickens, turkeys and geese, one owl, one crow and one sandhill crane. “These species of birds can be carriers of the avian influenza and were exposed to the vulture population that has been dying off,” it said in Monday's unsigned statement.

Noah's Ark still has hundreds of birds which are alive and well, the sanctuary said.

Hennebelle and state Agriculture Secretary Gary Black did not identify Noah's Ark by name, describing it only as a non-commercial flock in Henry County.

The state Agriculture Department was notified Aug. 13 that an unusual number of black vultures had died, and was told five days later that domestic ducks were showing bird flu symptoms, Hennebelle said. She said samples were taken from the ducks on Aug. 19, and three days later a federal lab confirmed that it was the H5N1 strain.

That strain has infected commercial and backyard flocks in 39 states and has been reported in 2,100 wild birds in all but a handful of states, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

“As a natural disease event, the site needs to be contained, cleaned up and then sanitized/disinfected. We are at the contained stage,” said a statement Monday from Noah’s Ark. “Our State Agency partners are and will lead clean up and sanitization. They will lead full vulture removal and roost removal and sanitation.”

Neither state officials nor Noah's Ark said how many black vultures have died there.

Animal care manager Allison Hedgecoth told WXIA-TV that at least 700 black vultures have died. She had been suspended before talking with the station, according to a statement Tuesday from the sanctuary.

McConnaughey reported from New Orleans.

Copyright 2022 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

©2022 Capitol Broadcasting Company, Inc.