
IMAGE SOURCE,ISRAEL NATURE AND PARKS AUTHORITY Image caption, Rangers began retrieving dead cranes from Hula Lake in northern Israel on Monday
Tens of thousands of turkeys are being destroyed in Israel, as it tries to contain a serious avian flu outbreak.
More than 5,000 migratory cranes have already died at the Hula Nature Reserve, which Environment Minister Tamar Zandberg called “the worst blow to wildlife” in Israel’s history.
Local farmers were also being forced to cull half a million chickens, prompting fears of a possible egg shortage.
So far no transmission of the A(H5N1) virus to humans has been reported.
However, Prime Minister Naftali Bennett met his national security adviser and other experts on Monday to discuss efforts to stop that from happening.
People who have been in close contact with infected birds are being given preventative treatment.
Images published by the Israel Nature and Parks Authority showed rangers in protective suits using a dinghy to retrieve the dead cranes from Hula Lake to prevent other wildlife being infected.
The authority also reported that the remains of 250 cranes had been seen in the surrounding Hula Valley and that 30 sick cranes had been observed elsewhere in the country.
The sight of tens of thousands of cranes from Europe wintering at the Hula Nature Reserve is usually a delight for bird-watchers. But the site was declared off-bounds to visitors last week because of the devastating avian flu outbreak.
Avian flu viruses occur naturally in migratory waterfowl, which tend not to develop symptoms.
Domestic birds are far more susceptible and once the virus is found in commercial or household flocks, rapid destruction is recommended of all birds that might be infected.
The Times of Israel said the first outbreak of avian flu in Israel this autumn was reported on 18 October at Moshav Nahalal in the Jezreel Valley, about 60km south-west of the Hula Nature Reserve.
In November, cases were reported at a kibbutz and two poultry farms, it added.