Bulletins
Point Pelee National Park
Avian Influenza (H5N1) 2022
Issued: April 15, 2022
Avian Influenza (H5N1) 2022
This year, Canada has seen outbreaks of a highly infectious strain of avian influenza, a naturally occurring virus that affects wild and domestic birds. There has been a confirmed case of this virus in Point Pelee National Park. While it remains safe to visit the park, Parks Canada asks visitors to take the following precautions:
When visiting Point Pelee National Park
- Never approach or handle wildlife in the park, including sick, injured or dead birds.
- Never allow your pet to approach wildlife, including sick, injured or dead birds.
- If you see sick, injured or deceased wildlife in Point Pelee National Park, call 1 877-852-3100 or let a staff member know.
- Never feed wild birds from your hand or try to lure birds with food or seeds.
- Clean all clothing and footwear before coming to the park
- Clean/disinfect footwear before leaving the park, particularly if you raise fowl or have pet birds at home.
While at home or outside the park
- Regularly clean indoor and outdoor bird houses, bird feeders and bird baths using a weak solution of domestic bleach (10% sodium hypochlorite), and ensure they are well rinsed and dried before re-use.
- Remove bird feeders from areas that are open to poultry and other domestic animals.
- Limit any travel to farms which house fowl (chickens, turkeys, ducks, etc).
- If you encounter a sick or dead wild bird outside the park, contact the Canadian Wildlife Health Cooperative at 866-673-4781 or report online at cwhc.wildlifesubmissions.org.
Diseases such as avian influenza are naturally occurring in wildlife populations and past outbreaks eventually declined as populations of wild birds built immunity. Parks Canada will continue to follow all health precautions and work with Environment and Climate Change Canada, and the Canadian Food Inspection Agency to monitor the situation.
- For information about Avian Influenza in wild birds, please consult Environment and Climate Change Canada - Avian influenza in wild birds - (Canada.ca)
- For more information about Avian Influenza in backyard flocks, please consult the Canadian Food Inspection Agency - Avian influenza (bird flu) - Canadian Food Inspection Agency - (Canada.ca)
- Date modified :