Feds: High number of seal deaths at Maine beaches linked to bird flu

An unusual number of seals are becoming stranded and dying off Maine beaches this summer, and avian influenza is to blame, the federal government said Tuesday.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has confirmed that samples from four Maine seals tested positive for the virus. The animals all died or required euthanasia, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said.

Marine mammal rescuers started to notice an unusually high number of seal strandings in June, and then the USDA conducted the tests, NOAA said in a statement. The rate of dead seal strandings in Maine is about three times the normal rate for the summer and is close to 60, the agency said.

Kennebunkport issued a notice to residents this week about the elevated number of seals stranding on their shores over the past few weeks.

"Please, do not approach any animals on the beach as it might be hazardous to your health," the notice stated. "The town is working to address the issue with guidance from state and federal officials, and we will provide more updates soon."

The USDA is notifying the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state animal and public health officials about the deaths, which came after a bird flu outbreak that led to the deaths of tens of millions of chickens and turkeys on farms. The virus is capable of jumping to mammals, though it rarely affects humans.

It's not the first instance of bird flu jumping to marine mammals such as seals, but the federal government is monitoring the deaths closely nonetheless, said Allison Ferreira, a NOAA spokesperson.

"There is a national outbreak of avian flu happening, so that was the cause of concern for these animals," Ferreira said.

A harbor seal pokes its head out of the water in Casco Bay, Thursday, July 30, 2020, off Portland, Maine. An usual number of seals have been getting stranded and dying off Maine this summer, and avian influenza is to blame, the federal government said Tuesday July 5, 2022.
A harbor seal pokes its head out of the water in Casco Bay, Thursday, July 30, 2020, off Portland, Maine. An usual number of seals have been getting stranded and dying off Maine this summer, and avian influenza is to blame, the federal government said Tuesday July 5, 2022.

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Most of the seals that have been founded stranded in Maine this summer have been dead, NOAA said. The dead seals have included gray seals and harbor seals.

The health risk "posed by avian flu to the general public is low; however, precautions are recommended," NOAA's statement said. The agency said people and pets should never approach seals, and should contact authorities if they find an animal they believe is stranded.

Elsewhere in New England, hundreds of birds have washed up dead on Martha's Vineyard and Maine beaches, and local officials have sounded the alarm about a possible bird flu outbreak.

The source of the outbreak among seals is still being investigated.

Marine Mammals of Maine, a rescue organization, that it has responded to 40 stranded seals since June 1. Katy Green, a spokesperson for the organization, said it is "aware of this evolving situation" and working with NOAA on it.

Gray seals and harbor seals are abundant off New England, where they are beloved by wildlife watchers and sometimes bemoaned by fishermen. However, the bird flu deaths don't represent the first time they've died off at an alarming rate.

NOAA declared an "unusual mortality event" for the seals after more than 2,700 of them stranded off Maine, New Hampshire and Massachusetts from July 2018 to March 2020. Feds attributed those deaths to the phocine distemper virus. That virus does not impact humans.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: High number of seal deaths at Maine beaches linked to bird flu