BERLIN : A dead cat found on the German island of Ruegen this week was infected with the highly pathogenic form of H5N1 bird flu that can be fatal to humans, the national veterinary laboratory said.
The Friedrich Loeffler Institute said the cat had exactly the same, highly contagious strain of the virus detected in wild swans found on the Baltic Sea island, the epicentre of Germany's bird flu outbreak.
It said this was the first case of its kind in the European Union.
The laboratory referred to the type of H5N1 found in the cat as the "Asian" strain of the virus that has claimed 93 human lives since 2003.
It also killed domestic cats, tigers and a panther in Asia in 2004, leading German scientists to remark that they were not surprised a feline here had succumbed to the disease.
The cat was found near a docked ferry on Ruegen, the same spot where infected wild swans were found in mid-February, signalling the start of the outbreak in Germany.
The case has prompted the German authorities to order pet owners in bird flu-hit regions from the Baltic to the southern border with Switzerland to keep cats indoors and dogs on leashes.
It has also heightened fears of a long-running epidemic in Germany that could infect poultry and humans.
German media reported on Thursday that Agriculture Minister Horst Seehofer was considering restricting access to the country's poultry farms, which have so far been spared the virus. - AFP /dt
cat in Germany
The Friedrich Loeffler Institute said the cat had exactly the same, highly contagious strain of the virus detected in wild swans found on the Baltic Sea island, the epicentre of Germany's bird flu outbreak.
It said this was the first case of its kind in the European Union.
The laboratory referred to the type of H5N1 found in the cat as the "Asian" strain of the virus that has claimed 93 human lives since 2003.
It also killed domestic cats, tigers and a panther in Asia in 2004, leading German scientists to remark that they were not surprised a feline here had succumbed to the disease.
The cat was found near a docked ferry on Ruegen, the same spot where infected wild swans were found in mid-February, signalling the start of the outbreak in Germany.
The case has prompted the German authorities to order pet owners in bird flu-hit regions from the Baltic to the southern border with Switzerland to keep cats indoors and dogs on leashes.
It has also heightened fears of a long-running epidemic in Germany that could infect poultry and humans.
German media reported on Thursday that Agriculture Minister Horst Seehofer was considering restricting access to the country's poultry farms, which have so far been spared the virus. - AFP /dt
cat in Germany



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....Give me one! :fly3:
Normally cats get kittens in Spring... but winter...
My hubby was like
