News Update
As of late October 2025, the H5N1 avian flu crisis has entered a tense new phase as the autumn bird migration puts Northern Hemisphere poultry farms on high alert. This follows a year of unprecedented mammal-to-mammal transmission, with persistent outbreaks in U.S. cattle herds raising significant public health concerns. Ecologically, scientists are anxiously monitoring Antarctica’s new breeding season, after the virus caused catastrophic die-offs in penguin colonies for the first time earlier this year, confirming its devastating, globe-spanning reach. To be writing about our environment and species loss at this time in history is to walk in grief for a part of every day it seems. – Kevin Parker -Site Publisher
A brief 5-minute audio outline of the content in this article below
A Silent Sky
The cliffs of Bass Rock should be a chaos of sound. For centuries, this volcanic plug in the Firth of Forth, off the coast of Scotland, has been the world’s largest colony of Northern Gannets, a raucous, thriving city of seabirds. But the sound is different now. A strange quiet hangs in the salt-laced air, punctuated by the unsettling calls of the few who remain.¹
Where tens of thousands of nests should be, there are empty ledges. The survivors are marked, some of them, by an unnerving change: their once pale blue-grey irises have turned a stark, inky black, a peculiar scar left by the infection they somehow weathered.² This is not an isolated tragedy. The silence on Bass Rock is a microcosm of a planetary crisis, an ecological catastrophe unfolding along the invisible highways of the sky.
The antagonist is a virus, a hyper-virulent strain of highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) known as H5N1. It is a plague born of the modern world, and it has conquered the globe. How did this microscopic enemy emerge to threaten entire species? How has it traveled from a farm in southern China to the last pristine wilderness of Antarctica? And what does its relentless march mean for the future of the world’s birds—and for us?
Genesis of a 21st-Century Plague
The story of avian influenza is ancient. As early as 1878, veterinarians in Italy described a mysterious and lethal poultry disease they called “fowl plague.”³ It wasn’t until 1955 that the culprit was identified as a Type A influenza virus, a microbe that has likely co-existed with wild birds for millennia.³⁻⁴
For most of its history, this relationship was one of relative balance. Wild waterfowl, particularly ducks and geese, are the natural reservoirs for a vast array of low-pathogenic avian influenza viruses, which typically cause few, if any, signs of illness.⁵⁻⁶ But in 1996, something changed. On a domestic goose farm in Guangdong, China, a new and brutally efficient killer was born: a highly pathogenic H5N1 virus, officially named A/goose/Guangdong/1/1996.⁷⁻⁸
This was the pivotal event. The virus had made an evolutionary leap, and the conditions for this transformation were entirely man-made. The intensification of poultry farming, with vast, densely packed monocultures of birds often situated near wetlands frequented by migratory waterfowl, created what scientists call the “perfect interface.”⁹⁻¹⁰ These factory farms became, in effect, industrial-scale petri dishes, allowing a typically mild virus from wild birds to spill over into domestic flocks, where it could replicate and mutate at an explosive rate before spilling back into the wild, now armed with unprecedented lethality.⁹⁻¹⁰ This was not a purely natural disaster; it was a crisis sparked in the crucible of our global food system.
From that point on, the virus became a relentless, shape-shifting foe. Influenza viruses evolve through two primary mechanisms: “antigenic drift,” a slow accumulation of minor genetic changes, and “antigenic shift,” a more dramatic and sudden reassortment of genes when two different viruses infect the same host.³ This genetic shuffling allowed the virus’s surface protein, hemagglutinin (HA), to diversify into a dizzying array of genetic groups, or clades.⁷
First came new subtypes like H5N6 and H5N8, which spread globally. Then, a particularly aggressive lineage within the H5 family, clade 2.3.4.4b, rose to dominance. By 2021, this was the variant sweeping across the globe, a monster of our own making, now fully adapted for life on the wing.⁷⁻⁸
The Panzootic Unfolds: A Virus on the Wing
The great migratory flyways—the ancient, invisible highways that guide birds across continents—became the primary vectors for the new plague. The very instinct that ensures the survival of countless species was weaponized against them, turning a magnificent natural phenomenon into a mechanism for global disease transmission.¹¹⁻¹²
The spread was methodical and terrifyingly swift. After its initial emergence, the virus smoldered for several years before re-emerging in 2003 to cause widespread poultry outbreaks across Asia. By 2005, wild birds were carrying it to Africa, the Middle East, and Europe.⁷
But the arrival of clade 2.3.4.4b marked a new, more aggressive phase. In late 2021, it was detected in wild birds in Canada and the United States.¹³⁻¹⁴ By February 2022, it was tearing through U.S. commercial poultry and backyard flocks.¹⁵ Then, in October 2022, it breached a new continent, arriving in South America and unleashing a wave of death on a scale that shocked even seasoned biologists.¹⁶⁻¹⁷
Critically, the virus’s behavior had changed. Previous outbreaks were largely seasonal, peaking during the spring and fall migrations and then subsiding. This new strain, however, persisted year-round. It was no longer just a visitor; it had become endemic in the wild bird populations of Europe and North America, a permanent and lethal feature of the ecosystem.¹⁻¹⁸ The crisis was no longer a series of acute emergencies, but a chronic, grinding panzootic—the animal equivalent of a pandemic.
A World of Feathers, Falling
A silent cliff-face,
White wings no longer return,
The ocean is gray.
Nowhere has the impact been more visceral than among the world’s great seabird colonies. Their very nature—breeding in dense, noisy, shoulder-to-shoulder cities—makes them catastrophically vulnerable. The virus spreads through these colonies like a firestorm.
The litany of losses is staggering. In the Netherlands, up to 80% of the breeding population of Sandwich Terns vanished in a matter of weeks.¹ In Greece, more than 2,000 Dalmatian Pelicans, a near-threatened species, perished.¹ And in the United Kingdom, home to roughly 90% of the world’s Great Skuas, the virus has affected more than 80% of the population, pushing a once-fierce predator to the brink.¹

The virus does not stop with its initial victims. It ripples through the food web. Bald eagles, red-tailed hawks, black vultures, and peregrine falcons have all been found dead, likely after scavenging on the carcasses of infected waterfowl and seabirds.¹⁻¹⁹ This secondary wave of mortality demonstrates the virus’s power to destabilize entire ecosystems from the top down.
A fallen hunter,
The lethal feast now consumed,
Wide sky holds no king.

When the virus reached South America, it found a continent of immunologically naive birds. The devastation was immediate and immense. In Peru and Chile, tens of thousands of Peruvian pelicans, Guanay cormorants, and Peruvian boobies died, their bodies littering the beaches.²⁰⁻²¹ Across the continent, the virus was reported in 104 different wild bird species.¹⁶
The mass death of these colonial seabirds represents more than just a population-level tragedy. It is the beginning of a profound ecological cascade. Seabirds are “ecosystem engineers,” transporting immense quantities of marine-derived nutrients, via their guano, from the ocean to terrestrial islands.²² This nutrient subsidy enriches soils, supports unique plant communities, and shapes the entire island food web.²²⁻²³ With the birds gone, this vital link is severed. The virus is not just killing birds; it is fundamentally re-shaping and impoverishing entire island ecosystems, a legacy of ecological degradation that will persist for decades.²²
| Species (Common and Scientific Name) | Region/Country | Year(s) | Approximate Number of Deaths |
| Northern Gannet (Morus bassanus) | Canada | 2022 | >8,000 |
| Sandwich Tern (Thalasseus sandvicensis) | Netherlands | 2022 | 80% of breeding population |
| Great Skua (Stercorarius skua) | United Kingdom | 2022 | >80% of UK population |
| Dalmatian Pelican (Pelecanus crispus) | Greece | 2022 | >2,000 |
| Common Crane (Grus grus) | Israel | 2021 | 5,000 |
| Peruvian Pelican (Pelecanus thagus) | Peru | 2022-23 | 35,500 |
| Guanay Cormorant (Leucocarbo bougainvillii) | Peru | 2022-23 | 114,900 |
| Peruvian Booby (Sula variegata) | Peru | 2022-23 | 128,700 |
| South American Sea Lion (Otaria flavescens) | Peru, Chile | 2023 | 20,000 |
| Southern Elephant Seal (Mirounga leonina) | Argentina | 2023 | 17,000 pups |
Sources: BirdLife International, The Guardian, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.¹⁻²⁰⁻²¹⁻²⁴
The Last Sanctuaries Breached
From north to south pole,
A virus rides on the wind,
Cold silence descends.
For a time, the world’s polar regions remained untouched, protected by distance and the sheer hostility of their environments. But in a world connected by migratory birds, no sanctuary is absolute. The virus has now reached the planet’s frozen poles.
In the north, H5N1 has been detected in the Canadian Arctic.²⁵ In Alaska, it has killed not only birds but also mammals at the top of the food chain, including the first confirmed death of a polar bear from the virus.²⁶⁻²⁷
The southern breach was even more alarming. In October 2023, the virus was detected on the sub-Antarctic island of South Georgia. By early 2024, it was confirmed on the Antarctic mainland itself.²⁸⁻²⁹ Researchers arriving for the field season found a grim scene: the bodies of dead skuas, a predatory gull, littering their nesting sites.²⁸
The arrival of H5N1 in Antarctica represents a compounding catastrophe. The continent’s ecosystems are already under extreme stress from accelerating climate change, which is shifting sea ice extent and altering the composition of animal communities.²⁸ Now, a novel, highly lethal pathogen has been introduced into a fragile system populated by species that have no evolutionary experience with this kind of threat. The dense colonies of penguins and seals, iconic symbols of the Antarctic, are exquisitely vulnerable.²⁸⁻²⁹ This is a real-time, uncontrolled experiment on the resilience of one of Earth’s last great wildernesses, and the outcome is terrifyingly uncertain.
The Human Response: A Desperate Fight
Faced with a threat of this magnitude, the human response has been a mixture of brutal necessity, scientific innovation, and fraught political debate.
For the multi-billion-dollar global poultry industry, the first line of defense is biosecurity: strict protocols to limit farm visitors, disinfect equipment, and keep domestic flocks separate from wild birds.³⁰⁻³¹ When these measures fail, the response is swift and grim: “depopulation.” Entire flocks, sometimes numbering in the millions, are culled to stamp out the virus and prevent its spread.³² Since 2022, nearly 97 million commercial and backyard birds have been killed in the United States alone, with outbreaks continuing to flare up into late 2025 across the Midwest and beyond.³³⁻³⁴
Experts argue that culling, however brutal, is a necessary evil. The H5N1 virus is so lethal in poultry, with mortality rates approaching 100%, that allowing it to run its course is not a viable option. “The quicker you depopulate, the quicker you can prevent disease transmission,” explains Dr. Maurice Pitesky of UC Davis.³⁵ Ian Brown, a virologist at the Pirbright Institute, adds that infected poultry “die quite a horrible death,” making culling an animal welfare issue as well as a public health imperative.³⁵
A more hopeful, though complex, alternative is vaccination. France has pioneered this approach, implementing a mandatory vaccination program for its commercial duck flocks in October 2023.³⁶ The results have been stunning: a 96% reduction in outbreaks in the first year.³⁷ The key is the use of sophisticated DIVA vaccines, which allow officials to Differentiate Infected from Vaccinated Animals, ensuring that surveillance can continue alongside the vaccination campaign.³⁸
Despite this success, widespread adoption has been slow, particularly in the United States. The primary obstacle is not science, but trade. Some countries refuse to import poultry products from nations that vaccinate, fearing that vaccination could mask the silent spread of the virus.³⁹ This has created a policy paradox where a proven tool to reduce viral circulation, animal suffering, and the risk of mutation is being underutilized due to economic concerns.
While these debates play out, a vast global network keeps watch. Government agencies like the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) and the World Organisation for Animal Health (WOAH) track outbreaks meticulously.⁵⁻³⁹ At the same time, an army of citizen scientists—birdwatchers and members of the public—provides a crucial early warning system by reporting sightings of sick or dead wild birds.⁴⁰
On the absolute front lines are wildlife veterinarians and rehabilitators. People like Dr. Sherri Cox in Canada are often the first to encounter the virus in new species, conducting what she calls “living research” as sick animals are brought to her clinic.⁴¹ It was her team that first diagnosed H5N1 in North American red foxes, a critical discovery that highlighted the virus’s growing affinity for mammals. These rehabilitators face immense logistical, financial, and emotional burdens as they try to save individual animals while also serving as sentinels for a global panzootic.⁴¹⁻⁴²
An Endemic Future?
The consensus among experts is stark: this strain of H5N1 is not going away. It is now likely a permanent, endemic feature of our planet’s ecosystems.² The goal is shifting from eradication to long-term management and mitigation. As Dr. James Pearce-Higgins of the British Trust for Ornithology warns, future outbreaks, combined with other environmental pressures like climate change, could push already vulnerable species “beyond recovery.”⁴³
And the specter of a human pandemic, however remote, remains. The risk to the general public is still considered low. But the virus’s unprecedented leap into dozens of mammal species—from foxes and seals to dairy cattle—is a clear warning.⁹⁻⁴⁴ Each new mammalian infection is another roll of the evolutionary dice, an opportunity for the virus to acquire the mutations needed for efficient human-to-human transmission.³⁵ “The only thing we know for certain is that this virus is going to continue to change,” says virologist Dr. Juergen Mayer, “and we don’t know in what direction.”⁴⁵
There are glimmers of hope. Some studies suggest that raptors, once highly susceptible, are now showing higher survival rates, hinting that some wild populations may be developing immunity.⁴⁵ But the evolutionary timescale required for such adaptation is long, and the immediate cost in lives is immense.
Ultimately, the story of H5N1 is the ultimate illustration of the “One Health” concept: the immutable fact that the health of a wild bird in a remote Scottish estuary, a chicken on an industrial farm, a cow in a dairy barn, and a person in a bustling city are all inextricably linked.⁴³⁻⁴⁴ The silent skies over Bass Rock are not a distant ecological curiosity. They are a warning, and it is for all of us.
Endnotes
- BirdLife International, “An Unprecedented Wave of Avian Flu Has Been Devastating Bird Populations Across the Northern Hemisphere,” August 8, 2022.
- David M. Bird, “In-Flew-Enza,” British Ornithologists’ Union (blog), accessed November 15, 2025.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Timeline of Events: Avian Influenza (Bird Flu),” updated June 1, 2024.
- Edoardo Perroncito, “Epizoozia tifoide nei gallinacei,” Annali della Reale Accademia d’Agricoltura di Torino 21 (1878): 87–126.
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, “Detections of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in Wild Birds,” updated October 28, 2025.
- S. Krauss et al., “Influenza in Wild Waterfowl,” Influenza (2007).
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Emergence and Evolution of H5N1 Bird Flu,” July 2024.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “Emergence and Evolution of H5N1 Bird Flu (Text Version),” accessed November 15, 2025.
- Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, “How is bird flu affecting animal populations?” accessed November 15, 2025.
- Paul C. M. Gell et al., “Rethinking Avian Influenza: A Call for a New Paradigm,” PMC, February 20, 2010.
- Richard J. Webby, “Bird migration has started. Surveillance and early detection are key, especially as it relates to H5N1,” Contagion Live, October 1, 2025.
- Jonathan F. Runstadler et al., “Intensive transmission in wild, migratory birds drove rapid geographic dissemination and repeated spillovers of H5N1 into agriculture in North America,” PMC, October 17, 2025.
- U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, “Avian Influenza,” accessed November 15, 2025.
- Yale Medicine, “H5N1 Bird Flu: What to Know,” updated November 15, 2024.
- American Academy of Ophthalmology, “Bird Flu (Avian Influenza),” updated February 14, 2025.
- Sebastian D. A. Guayana et al., “The Unprecedented Expansion of H5N1 Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in South America and Antarctica,” bioRxiv (preprint), October 4, 2025.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, “As H5 Bird Flu Spreads South in the Americas, it Poses a Threat to Animal and Human Health,” March 14, 2023.
- Sylvain Comte, “Next-generation vaccines: the key to stopping avian flu before it spreads,” The Poultry Site, March 26, 2025.
- Cornell Wildlife Health Lab, “Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza,” updated April 17, 2025.
- World Organisation for Animal Health, “Controlling the surge of avian influenza cases in Central and South America,” accessed November 15, 2025.
- Phoebe Weston and Niko Kommenda, “‘Forgotten epidemic’: with over 280 million birds dead how is the avian flu outbreak evolving?” The Guardian, September 4, 2024.
- D. A. Wardle et al., “Above- and below-ground impacts of introduced predators in seabird-dominated ecosystems,” Ecology Letters 9, no. 12 (December 2006): 1297–1307.
- M. P. L. Smith et al., “Climate-Driven Trophic Cascades Affecting Seabirds around the British Isles,” Oceanography and Marine Biology: An Annual Review 53 (August 2015): 55–80.
- Chris Walzer, “How bird flu is affecting animal populations,” Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, accessed November 15, 2025.
- Polar Knowledge Canada, “Avian influenza in Arctic and Northern Canada,” updated June 20, 2025.
- Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, “First polar bear to die of bird flu: what are the implications?” January 16, 2024.
- U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, “Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza and Migratory Birds in Alaska,” accessed November 15, 2025.
- Friedrich Schiller University Jena, “Bird flu in the Antarctic is spreading,” September 16, 2025.
- Lisa Schnirring, “Avian flu reaches Antarctica’s mainland,” CIDRAP, February 28, 2024.
- U.S. Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, “Protect Your Flock From Avian Influenza,” 2022.
- University of Minnesota Extension, “Avian influenza basics for noncommercial poultry flock owners,” updated 2025.
- Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources, “Avian Influenza,” accessed November 15, 2025.
- Wildlife Management Institute, “Avian Influenza Update,” Outdoor News Bulletin, October 2025.
- Dan Flynn, “Pause in bird flu outbreaks is over as commercial and backyard flocks have been hit hard,” Food Safety News, October 31, 2025.
- Jessica McDonald, “RFK Jr.’s Faulty Advice on Bird Flu,” FactCheck.org, March 20, 2025.
- Avianews, “France: Avian Influenza nearly eradicated thanks to vaccination,” October 16, 2025.
- Jackie Linden, “France resumes HPAI vaccination program,” WATT Poultry, October 3, 2025.
- Ceva, “Next-generation vaccines: the key to stopping avian flu before it spreads,” The Poultry Site, March 26, 2025.
- World Organisation for Animal Health, “High pathogenicity avian influenza (HPAI) in cattle,” updated August 22, 2025.
- Pembrokeshire County Council, “Council officers conduct visits in response to Avian Influenza incident,” October 2, 2024.
- University of Guelph News, “As Avian Flu Spreads, The World Needs More Wildlife Rehabilitators,” June 22, 2025.
- Jennifer Fiala, “Vets on avian flu front lines describe a crisis with no end in sight,” VIN News Service, January 11, 2024.
- John Craven, “‘Bird flu is on the rampage. Here’s how you can help stop its spread this autumn,’” Countryfile.com, accessed November 15, 2025.
- Marcela Uhart, “Avian Influenza Virus Is Adapting to Spread to Marine Mammals,” UC Davis News, February 28, 2024.
- National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, “Understanding the Basics of Bird Flu,” May 2025.