Mike Del Toro

Mike Del Toro

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Restrictions on Game Bird Imports Due to Avian Influenza

After two years of COVID-19 restrictions on American hunters traveling to Canada to hunt waterfowl, a new virus concern could alter the plans of visiting waterfowlers this fall.

An outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza — a.k.a. the bird flu — means the harvested meat of ducks, geese and game birds from affected areas will not be allowed to be brought into the United States.

snow geese cranes and other waterfowl
snow geese and cranes

HPAI has been detected in domestic Canadian birds, prompting the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service to prohibit most avian products from crossing the border this spring and summer. The provisional ban applies to live birds and eggs, as well as hunter-harvested game birds.

An APHIS Import Alert issued June 22 states, “Unprocessed avian products and byproducts originating from or transiting a restricted zone will not be permitted to enter the United States, including hunter-harvested meat. Non-fully finished avian hunting trophies must be consigned to an APHIS-approved taxidermy establishment.”

The import restrictions currently in place would only affect hunters at a few popular Canadian waterfowl hunting destinations. The zones are continually changing, and it’s possible all restrictions could be lifted by the time fall hunting seasons open in Canada. Up-to-date maps of restricted zones are available on the Canadian Food Inspection Agency Avian Influenza Zones website.

For now, restrictions have been issued in specific regions — called primary control zones — where the disease has been identified in domestic birds. Hunter-harvested waterfowl meat taken in or passing through a restricted zone will not be allowed into the United States. As of June 22, a total of 54 zones are included in the APHIS alert, including regions of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick.

“It could be a concern for some visiting waterfowl hunters if restrictions are still in place come September,” said Dr. Chris Nicolai, waterfowl scientist for Delta Waterfowl. “Certainly, it’s a complication for bringing birds back into the United States, so hunters need to check to the zone maps and avoid those areas if they want to bring meat home.”

In 2019, before COVID-19 closed the border to travel, more than 19,000 non-residents — most of them Americans — hunted waterfowl in Canada. With borders fully reopened, many of those hunters will return to Canada’s fields and marshes this fall.

While the bird flu poses less disease risk to people, it is a serious threat to domestic poultry and waterfowl. It’s often fatal to birds. Past strains of avian influenza have not been known to cause widespread mortality in wild waterfowl, but HPAI has killed snow geese, Canada geese and bluebills in 2022.

HPAI has been detected in wild birds in more than 40 states and 10 provinces this year. Its prevalence will be continually monitored across the United States and Canada.

For more information on HPAI and import restrictions, visit the APHIS website.

Article courtesy of Delta Waterfowl Foundation.

Delta Waterfowl Foundation is The Duck Hunters Organization, a leading conservation group working to produce ducks and secure the future of duck hunting in North America. Visit Delta Waterfowl.

Original Author: Anna Kottakis

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