The United States Department of Agriculture has detected the presence of highly infectious avian flu in a backyard flock of birds in Kalamazoo County, Michigan.
It is the latest in a spate of infections across the U.S. As of Friday, the USDA has recorded seven cases involving poultry meant for consumption in three states—Delaware, Kentucky and Indiana. Five cases have been confirmed in backyard non-poultry flocks—two in Maine, plus one each in Virginia, New York and Michigan.
The USDA is also tracking influenza infections in wild birds, with 10 states reporting cases since the start of the year—including zoo animals in Florida.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the outbreak began in January and is the first in the United States since 2016.
The CDC advises that there is little risk to the public, but bird flu can spread to humans.
A.J.W. te Velthuis, a researcher at Princeton's Department of Molecular Biology, told Newsweek: "The natural reservoir for influenza viruses is birds. This means that influenza viruses can infect wild birds without much harm to these birds. The strains that wild birds carry are slightly different from human influenza viruses.
"This means that we don't have any immunity against them and thus that these viruses can potentially cause severe disease."
When avian flu mutates, te Velthuis added, it can gain the ability to spread from human to human, potentially causing severe respiratory disease with a high mortality rate. He explained: "Since we don't have any good antivirals against flu and no pre-existing immunity against avian flu, it would have the ability to cause a pandemic.
"There have been vaccines in development against some avian flu strains, and these may be deployed to protect us."
According to Professor Peter Barlow, chair of immunology and infection in the School of Applied Sciences at Edinburgh Napier University: "Transmission [to humans] can occur where individuals who have prolonged close contact with infected birds can become infected themselves."
The CDC says this usually occurs when infected birds shed the virus in their saliva, mucus and feces and this gets into a person's eyes, nose or mouth, or is inhaled.
It can happen when the virus is in the air in droplets or even possibly dust and a person breathes it in, or when a person touches something that has the virus on it and then touches their mouth, eyes, or nose.
Although human infection usually occurs when a person has unprotected contact with infected birds or surfaces contaminated with viruses, the CDC does say rare infections have been identified where direct contact is not known to have occurred.
Barlow says: "The advice from the CDC is that the most effective way of preventing avian influenza in humans is to avoid sources of exposure. Animal workers should also follow the guidance provided by CDC on the use of personal protective equipment."