bird flu

If your perfect vision of Toronto is one where backyards are thriving with farm life, sorry, this update might rain on your parade.

A recent report by the city recommended ending its successful UrbanHensTO pilot program this spring, which currently allows residents in parts of Toronto to house up to four chickens.

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A small backyard poultry flock in Kelowna is the latest to test positive for a new strain of bird flu, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency has confirmed.

The H5N1 avian influenza virus has been sweeping across Canada and its first cases in B.C. were identified on April 13 when a poultry farm in north Okanagan was placed under quarantine after the virus was detected in its flock, according to the CFIA.

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Sometimes it's easy to forget that other viruses exist in the world when still living through a pandemic. But the bird flu is spreading in Southern Ontario, and the Toronto Zoo is taking action.

On Monday, the Toronto Zoo announced in a tweet that they are "committed to the health and safety of the animals in our care and are taking proactive steps to protect our birds from avian influenza, which has been confirmed in a wild bird in southern Ontario."

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Bird flu can be deadly and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency just found some cases in southern Ontario.

On March 28, the CFIA announced a poultry flock in the southern end of the province contained "the presence of highly pathogenic avian influenza (AI)" which they said was a subtype of H5N1.

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