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U.S. health officials confirm bird flu in dairy cows, goat

These are the first cases to involve livestock nationwide, experts believe.

ST PAUL, Minn. — The bird flu is back, but it's showing up in different animals - from a goat on a western Minnesota farm to dairy cows in several other states.

The Minnesota Board of Animal Health joins agencies nationwide in following these cases closely, considering they involve livestock for what is believed to be the first time in the U.S.

Federal health officials say raw, unpasteurized milk from dairy cattle in at least three states tested positive for avian influenza, a virus usually found in birds, not livestock.

"In the southwest region especially, veterinarians are on really high alert," said Dr. Katie Cornille, a senior veterinarian with the Minnesota Board of Animal Health. "The virus that was detected, it wasn't a mutated form to cattle. It was the same virus that's been detected in wild birds."

In addition to wild birds, the virus resulted in the death and mass slaughter of more than 246 million poultry worldwide from 2005 to 2020, according to the CDC, and outbreaks have resurged since then.

WATCH: Poultry experts warn of rapidly spreading, dangerous bird flu (2022)

"Highly pathogenic avian influenza, the H5N1, that's the one that's kind of been causing us all the trouble these last years," Cornille said.

Now in Texas, Kansas and New Mexico, officials say the bird flu was found in older cows, and that symptoms include decreased lactation and low appetite. Cornille says it's important to note the experts are working to confirm whether the virus is what caused their symptoms.

This comes a week after at least one goat on a western Minnesota farm was diagnosed with bird flu following an outbreak among poultry on that farm.

Farmers are required to only allow milk from healthy animals to enter the food supply, and milk from sick animals is destroyed.

"At this point, there's really low concern from a consumer perspective," Cornille said. "Pasteurization of the milk you get in the store and commercial milk is extremely effective at inactivating viruses."

Still, she says Minnesota farmers should take some basic biosecurity precautions.

"When adding animals to your herd, making sure to quarantine them for 21-31 days before introducing them to  the other animals just to make sure they don't get sick," she said.

In late 2022, bird flu infections were reported in bears in Alaska, Nebraska, and Montana. This past December, it was also found in a polar bear. This was the first time an Arctic animal died from the virus.

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