| The California Department of Fish and
Game (DFG) is encouraging northern California residents to remove bird
feeders for at least one month to help slow an outbreak of salmonellosis,
a disease affecting small brown birds known as pine siskins that live
primarily in wooded areas. Human exposure to and contraction of the
disease from wild birds is rare and unlikely, especially if basic
precautions are taken. However, pets can contract the disease,
especially if they are exposed to fecal matter below the feeders.
Pine siskins are brown, streaked birds with yellow patches on the
wings and tail. Their diet consists primarily of seeds, making bird
feeders particularly attractive. Birds contract the disease from one
another, most often by eating fecal-contaminated food - but also by
sticking their heads inside tube feeders where their eyes come in
contact with the feeder itself.
California’s West Nile virus hotline has received many tips from
concerned citizens reporting dead pine siskins throughout the forested
areas of northern California, from Grass Valley to Eureka. Salmonellosis
is a bacterial disease and is not related to the West Nile virus.
To help control the disease, DFG biologists are urging residents to
discontinue feeding birds for at least 30 days, and when feeding is
resumed, to:
• Replace all food in birdfeeders and water in birdbaths daily. Clean
up old food around feeders
daily, and only use small amounts of food.
• Decontaminate feeders by using a 10 percent solution of household
bleach in water, preferably
cleaned just prior to adding new food.
• Spread small amounts of seed over a large area in the sun, instead of
using bird boxes or feeders.
Also, vary the location of seeds to avoid encouraging a concentration of
birds at one site.
• Replace wooden bird feeders with plastic or metal. Wood harbors
salmonella bacteria and cannot
be sanitized as effectively.
• Use gloves when handling dead birds and bird feeders and wash hands
with anti-bacterial soap
when finished.
This is the second time in less than a year that DFG has asked that
birdfeeders be removed to slow the spread of a disease affecting birds.
In July 2004, DFG asked that all bird feeders be removed for the purpose
of slowing an outbreak of trichomoniasis in California’s mourning dove
and band-tailed pigeon populations. More detailed information about that
disease and tips on controlling it and other avian diseases can be found
at http://www.dfg.ca.gov/news/news04/04060.html
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