The highly contagious avian flu — also called H5 bird flu or highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) — was detected in wild birds in Colorado in 2022.
In birds, the disease causes severe respiratory symptoms and is often deadly. But in cows, the infection is largely — but not always — restricted to the mammary glands, according to researchers at the University of Colorado Anschutz. Because of this, researchers believe that the disease was being transmitted to cows by contaminated milk equipment.
In the last six months, more than 75 percent of Colorado’s dairy herds were infected with the disease.
However, Baldwin hypothesized that a big reason the disease spread so rapidly between dairy herds was due to shared equipment and workers between farms. Even if someone is not infected, Baldwin said they can still carry this virus from one farm to another.
“In Colorado, most of our dairies are located geographically in the northeast region so there's a lot of connections between those dairies — even if they're a closed herd — there's a lot of shared vehicles, shared service providers, a lot of shared people that might be transmitting that virus between [herds].”
In July, Gov. Jared Polis extended bird flu as an emergency disaster declaration. The emergency fund helped cover costs associated with “monitoring and mitigation of disease spread, response … and recovery efforts,” including providing dairies with surveillance to help identify any infected cows.
According to Baldwin, the state will continue to implement mandatory weekly bulk tank testing and will continue to do so “until we have confidence that we don't have the disease.”
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