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Join our webinar: Preparing for bird flu impacts on Australian wildlife

A new strain of bird flu has caused mass mortalities to birds and mammals internationally and it’s only a matter of time before the effects are felt in Australia. Image: Steve Dew, CC BY-NC via iNaturalist.

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News story

9 August 2024

Join us on the 26th of August and hear from an expert panel on how bird flu is impacting wildlife globally and what we need to do to safeguard Australian wildlife.

It is only a matter of time before the highly pathogenic H5N1 bird flu strain reaches Australian wildlife, and not only birds are at risk. Get insights into the global impacts of bird flu, implications for Australian wildlife, plus how community can help at this free 45 minute lunchtime webinar.

Register to attend

At the webinar you will hear from three expert speakers:

  • Dr Michelle Wille from the University of Melbourne will present what has happened globally to wildlife and potential major impacts for Australian wildlife,
  • Dr Fiona Fraser from the Australian Government will talk about national preparedness and response plans for native wildlife beyond surveillance, including for highly vulnerable places and species, and
  • Dr Simone Vitali from Wildlife Health Australia will provide advice for the community on what to look for and how to respond.

The webinar will be MC'd by Jack Gough, Conservation Director of the Invasive Species Council.

Register to attend via: https://unimelb.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_cpA6sT-SREGfLUyFfAronQ#/registration

Given the enormity of this threat to Australian wildlife, this webinar is being jointly presented by the Biodiversity Council, Invasive Species Council, Australian Marine Conservation Society, Birdlife Australia, the Australian Land Conservation Alliance and WIRES.

Research has found that our native black swans are highly susceptible to bird flu and usually die within 2-3 days of contracting the disease. Image: Jaana Dielenberg

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Acknowledgements

The Biodiversity Council acknowledges the First Peoples of the lands and waters of Australia, and pays respect to their Elders, past, present and future and expresses gratitude for long and ongoing custodianship of Country.

The Biodiversity Council is an independent expert group founded by 11 Australian universities to promote evidence-based solutions to Australia’s biodiversity crisis. It is hosted by The University of Melbourne. It receives funding from 11 university partners and The Ian Potter Foundation, The Ross Trust, Trawalla Foundation, The Rendere Trust, Isaacson Davis Foundation, Coniston Charitable Trust and Angela Whitbread.



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Contact

Biodiversity Council

(c/o University of Melbourne)

Faculty of Science, SAFES (Building 122)

Victoria 3010 Australia


Enquiries

Email the Biodiversity Council

Media Manager

Jaana Dielenberg

Email Jaana

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