Investigators detected
the virus in 18 farms in the central Mexican state of Guanajuato,
Mexico's Agriculture Ministry said this week.
Chickens there were infected with the H7N3 virus, which Mexican authorities said does not pose a threat to humans.
"This virus is exclusive to birds, so there is no risk for public safety," the Agriculture Ministry said earlier this month.
Authorities offered different tallies of how many infected birds had been slaughtered.
Agriculture Minister
Enrique Martinez said Monday that more than 2.1 million chickens had
been killed -- including 519,000 egg-producing chickens, 722,265
breeding chickens and 900,000 chickens raised for meat.
On Tuesday, Javier
Usabiaga Arroyo, a state agriculture official, said the total number of
infected chickens killed was about 1.2 million, Mexico's state-run
Notimex news agency reported.
Officials have vaccinated
1.9 million birds since the outbreak began earlier this month, and they
plan to vaccinate millions more, the Agriculture Ministry said in a
statement this week.
The outbreak has sparked
concern about a possible spike in food prices, but authorities said
Monday that the number of slaughtered chickens is a small fraction of
the country's overall population and there is no reason for egg or
chicken prices to increase.
"The outbreak of avian influenza is controlled," Mexico's food safety agency said in a statement.
Other strains of bird flu have spread to humans and prompted authorities to slaughter animals.
In 1997, authorities in
Hong Kong killed about 1.5 million chickens after H5N1 avian influenza
passed from birds to humans there.
Last year a new strain
of H3N8 flu jumped from birds to mammals and was responsible for the
death of more than 160 seals off the New England coast.
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