Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur

Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur Cue: Cross-border trade in poultry and poultry products is big business in much of Africa. However despite being a good source of income for the traders, and a valuable source of meat and eggs for consumers, there can be risks in this cross-border trade. S...

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Main Author: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Format: Audio
Language:English
Published: Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/57205
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spelling ftcgiar:oai:cgspace.cgiar.org:10568/57205 2023-07-30T04:02:28+02:00 Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation 2015-03-12T08:33:09Z application/octet-stream https://hdl.handle.net/10568/57205 en eng Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation Rural Radio, Rural Radio Resource Pack 06/3 CTA. 2006. Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur. Rural Radio Resource Pack 06/3. Wageningen, The Netherlands: CTA. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/57205 Open Access Audio 2015 ftcgiar 2023-07-12T20:36:19Z Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur Cue: Cross-border trade in poultry and poultry products is big business in much of Africa. However despite being a good source of income for the traders, and a valuable source of meat and eggs for consumers, there can be risks in this cross-border trade. Spreading disease from one country to another is one risk. For example, when Nigeria first experienced outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian flu in early 2006, neighbouring countries became very concerned. For this reason, when outbreaks of contagious livestock disease occur, governments can decide to impose a ban on all imports of the livestock concerned, at least until the outbreak is controlled. However, few governments are can make import bans completely effective; they lack the trained staff to do it. Controlling movements of livestock within a country is even more difficult. But controlling diseases like avian flu is in everyone?s interest, and it is everyone?s responsibility to prevent the disease spreading. Farmers, for instance, must know the right thing to do if they suspect one or more of their birds has caught or died from the virus. In a recent interview, Excello Zidana spoke to Michael Nkosi, a lecturer at Malawi?s Natural Resources College, and began by asking what farmers should do if one of their birds shows symptoms of the virus. IN: ?I would advise that the ?? OUT: ??Thank you very much.? DUR?N: 5?56? BACK ANNOUNCEMENT: And asking the questions was Excello Zidana. The interview comes from a radio resource pack on avian flu produced by CTA. Transcript Nkosi I would advise that the first thing that farmers should do is actually to report to the nearest veterinary station. That is the first thing, so that maybe officers should come, verify the signs and symptoms, if there is need undertake sampling, take birds to the lab and then they would do analysis. But unfortunately in Malawi we may not have the capacity to test for avian influenza. But the other thing that farmers need to do is to intensify ... Audio Avian flu CGIAR CGSpace (Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research)
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description Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur Cue: Cross-border trade in poultry and poultry products is big business in much of Africa. However despite being a good source of income for the traders, and a valuable source of meat and eggs for consumers, there can be risks in this cross-border trade. Spreading disease from one country to another is one risk. For example, when Nigeria first experienced outbreaks of highly pathogenic avian flu in early 2006, neighbouring countries became very concerned. For this reason, when outbreaks of contagious livestock disease occur, governments can decide to impose a ban on all imports of the livestock concerned, at least until the outbreak is controlled. However, few governments are can make import bans completely effective; they lack the trained staff to do it. Controlling movements of livestock within a country is even more difficult. But controlling diseases like avian flu is in everyone?s interest, and it is everyone?s responsibility to prevent the disease spreading. Farmers, for instance, must know the right thing to do if they suspect one or more of their birds has caught or died from the virus. In a recent interview, Excello Zidana spoke to Michael Nkosi, a lecturer at Malawi?s Natural Resources College, and began by asking what farmers should do if one of their birds shows symptoms of the virus. IN: ?I would advise that the ?? OUT: ??Thank you very much.? DUR?N: 5?56? BACK ANNOUNCEMENT: And asking the questions was Excello Zidana. The interview comes from a radio resource pack on avian flu produced by CTA. Transcript Nkosi I would advise that the first thing that farmers should do is actually to report to the nearest veterinary station. That is the first thing, so that maybe officers should come, verify the signs and symptoms, if there is need undertake sampling, take birds to the lab and then they would do analysis. But unfortunately in Malawi we may not have the capacity to test for avian influenza. But the other thing that farmers need to do is to intensify ...
format Audio
author Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
spellingShingle Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur
author_facet Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
author_sort Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
title Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur
title_short Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur
title_full Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur
title_fullStr Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur
title_full_unstemmed Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur
title_sort increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur
publisher Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/57205
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_relation Rural Radio, Rural Radio Resource Pack 06/3
CTA. 2006. Increasing biosecurity when outbreaks occur. Rural Radio Resource Pack 06/3. Wageningen, The Netherlands: CTA.
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/57205
op_rights Open Access
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