Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry

As a result of the debut incursion of the avian influenza virus into Nigeria in January 2006, severe outbreaks occurred in a number of poultry farms leading to widespread fears and a lot of apprehension. The objectives of the study were to assess, document and highlight the economic and social impli...

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Main Author: P.U Owai
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Global Journal of Agricultural Sciences 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ajol.info/index.php/gjass/article/view/62783
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spelling ftjafricanj:oai:ojs.ajol.info:article/62783 2023-05-15T15:34:20+02:00 Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry P.U Owai 2010-12-14 application/pdf http://ajol.info/index.php/gjass/article/view/62783 en eng Global Journal of Agricultural Sciences http://ajol.info/index.php/gjass/article/view/62783 Copyright for articles published in this journal is retained by the journal. Global Journal of Agricultural Sciences; Vol 9, No 1 (2010) Assessment Economic Social Implications Avian Flu Nigerian Poultry Peer-reviewed Article 2010 ftjafricanj 2010-12-19T04:34:32Z As a result of the debut incursion of the avian influenza virus into Nigeria in January 2006, severe outbreaks occurred in a number of poultry farms leading to widespread fears and a lot of apprehension. The objectives of the study were to assess, document and highlight the economic and social implications of the disease outbreaks on the Nigerian poultry industry as well as recommend measures for its effective control. The review covered ten (10) states of the country as well as the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja, Nigeria. The results revealed that the avian influenza virus affected a total of 158 poultry farms located in 10 of the 36 states including the FCT Abuja. An estimated total of Seven hundred and three thousand, four hundred and thirty (703,430) poultry were lost, out of which 288,662 (41.06%) died, while 414,403 (58.94%) poultry were slaughtered. Estimated revenue loss in naira (the official Nigerian currency) amounted to Seven hundred and three million, sixty-five thousand naira (N703,065,000). Globally, between 1983-2004, a total of Sixty million, six thousand and one (61,006,001) birds were lost. Estimated revenue loss globally within the period also amounted to One billion, one hundred million Euros (E1.100,000,000) in addition to Three hundred and fifty million dollars ($350,000,000). Increased surveillance, close monitoring, improved sanitation, quarantine of poultry farms as currently being carried out will reduce the scourge of the disease infection in Nigeria. Article in Journal/Newspaper Avian flu AJOL - African Journals Online
institution Open Polar
collection AJOL - African Journals Online
op_collection_id ftjafricanj
language English
topic Assessment
Economic
Social Implications
Avian Flu
Nigerian Poultry
spellingShingle Assessment
Economic
Social Implications
Avian Flu
Nigerian Poultry
P.U Owai
Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry
topic_facet Assessment
Economic
Social Implications
Avian Flu
Nigerian Poultry
description As a result of the debut incursion of the avian influenza virus into Nigeria in January 2006, severe outbreaks occurred in a number of poultry farms leading to widespread fears and a lot of apprehension. The objectives of the study were to assess, document and highlight the economic and social implications of the disease outbreaks on the Nigerian poultry industry as well as recommend measures for its effective control. The review covered ten (10) states of the country as well as the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja, Nigeria. The results revealed that the avian influenza virus affected a total of 158 poultry farms located in 10 of the 36 states including the FCT Abuja. An estimated total of Seven hundred and three thousand, four hundred and thirty (703,430) poultry were lost, out of which 288,662 (41.06%) died, while 414,403 (58.94%) poultry were slaughtered. Estimated revenue loss in naira (the official Nigerian currency) amounted to Seven hundred and three million, sixty-five thousand naira (N703,065,000). Globally, between 1983-2004, a total of Sixty million, six thousand and one (61,006,001) birds were lost. Estimated revenue loss globally within the period also amounted to One billion, one hundred million Euros (E1.100,000,000) in addition to Three hundred and fifty million dollars ($350,000,000). Increased surveillance, close monitoring, improved sanitation, quarantine of poultry farms as currently being carried out will reduce the scourge of the disease infection in Nigeria.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author P.U Owai
author_facet P.U Owai
author_sort P.U Owai
title Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry
title_short Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry
title_full Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry
title_fullStr Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the Nigerian poultry industry
title_sort assessment of the economic and social implications of the avian flu outbreak on the nigerian poultry industry
publisher Global Journal of Agricultural Sciences
publishDate 2010
url http://ajol.info/index.php/gjass/article/view/62783
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_source Global Journal of Agricultural Sciences; Vol 9, No 1 (2010)
op_relation http://ajol.info/index.php/gjass/article/view/62783
op_rights Copyright for articles published in this journal is retained by the journal.
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