Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

mrshatnertoyou t1_iu51jra wrote

>Pigeons have become a target of a terrible disease called the Pigeon Paramyxovirus (PPMV) or Newcastle's Disease in the UK. It results in neurological symptoms, including trembling wings and a violently twisted neck. The affected pigeons become reluctant to move and can't fly. They also have green feces. The disease is fatal for pigeons.

>A JSPCA Animal Shelter spokesperson reported that the shelter had increased the number of grounded pigeons in the last few weeks. Many affected birds had neurological symptoms, such as a twisted neck, circling, or inability to stand. The spokesperson added that these symptoms are signs of pigeon paramyxovirus that affects poultry, doves and pigeons and is invariably fatal.

>PPMV is a notifiable disease in captive birds. It does not apply to wild birds. The affected birds die within a few days, and there is no treatment for the disease. PPMV is highly infectious and can spread through feces and other excretions of the affected birds. Surviving birds will shed the virus, becoming a risk to other birds. So, at JSPCA, the infected birds are humanely euthanised. Since the PPMV virus survives better in cold and wet months, the disease's clusters are usually found at this time of the year.

>FAQs

>Does the Pigeon Paramyxovirus (PPMV) or Newcastle's Disease affect only pigeons?

>PPMV affects doves, pigeons and poultry.

>Is PPMV highly infectious?

>PPMV is highly infectious, spreading through the affected bird's feces and other secretions.

From another article not behind a wall.

247

Morsigil t1_iu5ic4t wrote

Huh.. "invariably fatal" and "surviving birds" seem mutually exclusive.

61

Piranha91 t1_iu5nz0l wrote

Pretty sure it means before they shed virus while they’re still alive.

38

Lukeds t1_iu64brt wrote

I mean they don't in context but they do in your comment. Birds that have caught the disease but HAVE NOT died aka "surviving birds" spread the disease. Then they will die eventually.

14

TooDamnPretty t1_iu66e52 wrote

"infected birds" would be a better word choice. Surviving implies recovery, which doesn't match with a 100% fatality rate.

27

PuellaBona t1_iu7ptnl wrote

The article was wrong. Some birds do survive. No pathogen kills 100% of its hosts. It wouldn't survive.

−2

ecuintras t1_iu5rqc1 wrote

Oh snap. I saw a post about a pigeon with these symptoms a few weeks ago.

2

DeFex t1_iu6cfq4 wrote

So this could easily hit chicken factories?

1

tinypieceofmeat t1_iu7bbuy wrote

> Newcastle's Disease

Woah, we don't name diseases after places.

−1

bakedbeebs t1_iu65lhz wrote

i literally just saw a tiktok about ‘pigeons are friends, we carry no more disease than cats and dogs’ womp

−8