Author Topic: Dead Bird  (Read 1029 times)

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Offline Loader 3009

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Dead Bird
« on: May 17, 2004, 11:28:54 PM »
I found a dead song sparrow lying on my front walk.  I picked it up to dispose of it and decided to check it out for a clue to it's death.  I found, attached to it's neck, an engorged wood tick.  It had apparently sucked a vital amount of blood from the tiny bird's body.
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Offline IlliniTrapper15

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Dead Bird
« Reply #1 on: May 19, 2004, 05:27:26 AM »
:)  :)  Never thought i would hear of a tick killing something from sucking blood
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Offline Emac-user

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Dead Bird
« Reply #2 on: June 26, 2004, 01:37:55 AM »
A sparrow is a small bird. Perhaps the weight of a tick could have affected it's balance while flying? So perhaps it was not able to eat? Maybe there had been more than one tick?

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Offline Jack Crevalle

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Dead Bird
« Reply #3 on: June 26, 2004, 04:16:07 PM »
Do you have West Nile Virus in your area? I know it's carried by mosquitos so I assume it could be carried by ticks and it's deadly to birds.

Offline propredator

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Dead Bird
« Reply #4 on: June 26, 2004, 05:25:50 PM »
Ive came across a red tailed hawk and a hoot owl lying dead in the woods.Im guessing west nile also.Its been found in dead birds for the last 2 years around here.Also they have found it in horases.Guess i sould stay out of the woods but i aint scaret,just invincable.Maybe i will have those words put on my stone someday :)

Offline Loader 3009

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Dead Bird
« Reply #5 on: June 30, 2004, 02:15:17 PM »
Yeah, we have WNV here, but it affects mostly crows and bluejays.  I think I had it a couple of weeks ago.  I was sick with flu-like symptoms for three days.  Some people don't even get sick, while others die. Depends on your immune system.  It will kill a horse.

I read an article today that said there were only two countries in the world with the deadliest form of the virus.......The USA and Israel.  That's kinda scary, isn't it?  Makes you wonder about things.

Some people become immune to certain viruses after once being exposed.  I don't know if this is true with WNV.
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Offline MATLOCK12C

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to Loader 3009
« Reply #6 on: July 06, 2004, 10:26:05 AM »
It makes you wonder!
We have WNV down here in E. Tex, in spades! (that means a lot!)  :)
Other than covering your self with off, cutters etc, you just have to take your chance if ya go into the woods or even out in the yard!  :shock:

You think this WNV, could have been a bio wepon that got loose somehow? I know it's a strech, so dont lable me a looney tune just yet!  :)
You sure other countrys dont got this stuff too?
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Offline Loader 3009

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Dead Bird
« Reply #7 on: July 06, 2004, 11:45:50 AM »
Here's the article.  I underlined the paragraphs in question.

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Wednesday, June 30, 2004



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WEST NILE WATCH
Mosquito plague spreads to 4 more states
1st horse infections discovered in California

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Posted: June 30, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern




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© 2004 WorldNetDaily.com


 

West Nile virus spread yesterday to Tennessee, Connecticut, Kansas and Nebraska, with positive signs of infection in birds or humans in nearly every state in the continental U.S. reported this year, a survey by WorldNetDaily shows.

In addition, California's first cases of horse infections were reported in both Riverside and San Bernardino counties as officials prepared for a second round of pesticide spraying in Fontana, where six humans contracted the mosquito-borne virus.

Four horses – three in Riverside and one in San Bernardino counties – were infected with West Nile and three were euthanized. A Riverside County horse that received the two-shot vaccination series survived, said Steve Lyle of the Department of Food and Agriculture.

In Fontana, three trucks sprayed a 3-square-mile area with the pesticide resmethrin during a 90-minute operation at dawn Friday. Last week's application cut the number of mosquitoes roughly in half, said San Bernardino County vector ecologist Wakoli Wekesa. Officials planned another dawn spraying of the area today.


Ten human cases of West Nile have been confirmed in San Bernardino, Riverside, and Los Angeles counties so far this year. All the victims recovered.

The State of Connecticut's Mosquito Management Program officials said yesterday an infected crow was found earlier this month, the first such positive test this year in the state.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment also confirmed he presence of West Nile virus in a bird in Sedgwick County, the first confirmed report in the state 2004.

WNV is carried by birds and transmitted by mosquitoes that bite the infected birds, which then transmit it to horses and people.

Meanwhile, in New Mexico, two more people have become affected by mild cases of West Nile virus.

The New Mexico Department of Health reported a woman from Bernalillo County contracted an infection in Arizona, while a Santa Fe County woman was most likely infected near her home.

They join a San Juan County man who was infected with a mild case earlier this year.

So far, Arizona leads the Southwest and the country with 20 human cases. Colorado has four cases, and Texas has none.

In Nebraska, test results on a blue jay collected in Kearney County indicate the first bird in Nebraska to test positive for West Nile Virus this year.

In Tennessee, an unvaccinated horse in Fayette County was the state's first reported casualty of West Nile virus in 2004.

The mosquito-borne virus is having the biggest impact now in Arizona, with 20 cases including one fatality.

West Nile started infecting people in early May and had reached seven states as of Tuesday, according to the CDC's June 25 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. But virus-carrying mosquitoes or infected animals have now been found in nearly every state.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported 32 West Nile virus infections of humans so far this year, compared with none until July last year, health officials said.

A report released yesterday by wildlife health experts at the University of California, Davis, warns that West Nile could pose a serious threat to some species, especially rare and endangered birds, and encourages officials to broaden existing monitoring efforts to track the virus's movement in the state.

Prepared by a team led by Walter Boyce, director of the UC Davis Wildlife Health Center, at the request of the California Department of Fish and Game, the report predicts where West Nile virus poses the greatest risk to wildlife by examining mosquito abundance in relation to bird species that "amplify" the virus and the location of rare amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals.

As WND and Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin first reported some U.S. health officials are beginning to question why the U.S. strain of West Nile virus is deadlier to humans and birds than anywhere else on the planet – with the exception of Israel.

West Nile virus, which is transmitted to people by mosquitoes who fed on infected birds, killed 246 Americans and infected 9,862 last year. This is by far the worst human toll anywhere in the world at any time since the virus' discovery in Uganda in 1937.

A 74-year-old Phoenix women died last week of encephalitis, or swelling of the brain. The virus was transmitted through a mosquito bite.

About 20 percent of West Nile victims report flulike symptoms. About 1 percent of the time, they develop encephalitis, meningitis or permanent paralysis. The elderly and those with weakened immune systems are most susceptible.

U.S. health officials believe the West Nile virus has mutated into an illness far deadlier to human beings in the United States – but they don't know why.

Interestingly, the U.S. strain appears almost identical to only one other strain in the world – the one found in Israel.

Fewer than 1 percent of the people bitten by an infected mosquito get severely ill, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In most cases, those infected never get sick or suffer mild symptoms like fever, headache, nausea, body aches and a light skin rash.

The disease first appeared in the United States in 1999 in New York state and has since expanded westward. It has killed more than 560 people in the last five years.

The highest risk of infection for people and horses is from mid-July to mid-September.
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Offline Loader 3009

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Dead Bird
« Reply #8 on: August 09, 2004, 01:26:54 AM »
 Here's another incriminating article with serious implications.
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FROM JOSEPH FARAH'S G2 BULLETIN
CDC gave Saddam
West Nile samples
Did Iraqis weaponize mutated form of virus?

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Posted: August 9, 2004
1:00 a.m. Eastern

 © 2004 WorldNetDaily.com

While health officials reported this week West Nile virus has sickened 108 people in 10 states this summer, they continue to withhold opinions on how, where and why the mosquito-born disease originated.

The Centers for Disease Control gave samples of West Nile virus – among other deadly biological agents – to Saddam Hussein's Iraq in the 1980s.

Some national security sources – as well as health professionals – believe Saddam Hussein weaponized those samples and sent them back to the United States, via his ally Fidel Castro in Cuba, in revenge for his defeat in the Persian Gulf War and the decade-long sanctions imposed on his country by the U.S.

Surprisngly, it was the CDC that sent the samples directly to several Iraqi sites that weapons inspectors later determined to be part of Saddam Hussein's biological weapons program, according to both CDC files and congressional records from the early 1990s. Iraq had ordered the samples, saying it needed them for legitimate medical research.

The CDC and a biological-sample company, the American Type Culture Collection, sent strains of all the germs Iraq used to make weapons, including anthrax, the bacteria that make botulinum toxin, and the germs that cause gas gangrene, the records show. Iraq also got samples of other deadly pathogens, including West Nile virus.

The transfers came in the 1980s, when the United States backed Iraq in its war against Iran.

As previously reported in G2B, some U.S. health officials question why the U.S. strain of West Nile virus is deadlier to humans and birds than anywhere else on the planet – with the exception of Israel. They know West Nile virus has mutated into an illness far deadlier to human beings in the United States – but they don't know why. Interestingly, the U.S. strain appears almost identical to only one other strain in the world – the one found in Israel.

The disease is spread by mosquitoes, which feed off both birds and humans – along with other susceptible animals.

In most parts of the world where it has surfaced, the virus typically causes illness akin to the flu, bringing fever, headache, muscle aches and fatigue – unpleasant, but rarely fatal. The virus has not even proven fatal to all birds in other parts of the world. But the U.S. strain appears nearly 100 percent fatal to birds. They usually die within five days.

This has caused some health officials and scientists, as well as intelligence sources, to wonder if West Nile Virus is not a weaponized virus – one perhaps deliberately engineered and delivered to the two biggest targets of Islamic terrorism.

Israel was the first place in the world where West Nile virus was associated with killing birds. Until that outbreak in 1997, the virus was known to sicken birds, but not fatally.

Israel also was the site of an outbreak of West Nile virus in humans that caused 450 cases of neurological disease in 2000.

While some American intelligence sources are still suspicious about claims that Saddam Hussein had an active chemical and biological weapons program, others believe he unleashed that program on the U.S. in the form of West Nile virus.

While it is well-known that WNV is of Middle East origin, what is less well-known is the New Yorker report dating back to 2000 in which Saddam Hussein was quoted by a defector referring to "his final weapon, developed in laboratories outside Iraq ... free of U.N. inspection, the laboratories will develop strain SV 141 of the West Nile virus." There is also a report that the Centers for Disease Control actually sent WNV samples to Iraq in 1985.

There is increasing suspicion that one of his labs was not in Iraq at all – but less than 50 miles from the Florida coast. Cuban defectors say that Castro's Biological Front studied ways of using migratory birds to spread infectious diseases to the U.S. Saddam Hussein was also known to have close ties to Castro. And, according to Soviet defector Ken Alibek, Cuba, Iraq, Iran and other countries simultaneously received transfers of Soviet biotechnology.

Undersecretary of State John Bolton said Cuba's biological weapons capabilities underscore lingering concerns. He told an audience at the Heritage Foundation the U.S. is suspicious about Cuban biomedical laboratories and their ability to transfer biological weapons technology to Iraq, Syria and Libya – all countries that Castro visited the previous year.

In 1998, Clinton administration Defense Secretary William S. Cohen wrote a letter to Armed Service Committee Chairman Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., stating that he was "concerned about the use of Cuba as a base for intelligence activities directed against the United States" and "Cuba's potential to develop and produce biological agents, given its biotechnology infrastructure."

Cohen's letter concluded by telling Thurmond that the Department of Defense "remains vigilant to the concerns posed by Castro's Cuba." Attached to the letter was the defense secretary's classified report, "The Cuba Threat to U.S. National Security." The report's publicly released summary read: "Cuba's biotechnology industry is one of the most advanced in emerging countries and would be capable of producing biological warfare agents."

That same year, the CIA released a report that warned of the dangers of a biological terrorist attack on the U.S. The report explained that such an assault, if launched by a country with sophisticated means, could go undetected and be erroneously attributed to natural causes. The report listed a little over a dozen smaller nations as suspected of possessing biological weapons. Included high on the list was Cuba.

But it was a July 12, 1999, article in The New Yorker magazine by Richard Preston, a best-selling author, that perhaps laid the groundwork for the concerns about a Cuba-Iraq connection to West Nile.

Preston stated that the U.S. government "keeps a list of nations and groups that it suspects either have clandestine stocks of smallpox or seem to be trying to buy or steal the virus." That list is now known to include Cuba.

Preston's article also laid out suspicions that the outbreak of West Nile Virus on the East Coast may have come from a deliberate terrorist act and not from naturally occurring causes. Initially, some scientists scoffed at Preston's claim, but things have now changed.

One entomology expert who maintains an open mind on the West Nile outbreak, Dr. Jonathan F. Day of the University of Florida, said: "The sporadic appearance of WNV is disturbing, especially its appearance in the Florida Keys. It really appears that WN has been seeded throughout the eastern half of the United States. I guess the question is, by whom?"

Day continued, "The Florida and East Coast situations relative to human cases are remarkable. In some places, Atlanta, the Florida Keys, WNV appeared in humans without any other indication that the virus was present. In some cases, humans are acting as sentinels for the sentinel (animal carriers). This is unlike any other mosquito-borne virus in North America."

Dr. Manuel Cereijo, a professor at Florida International University, wrote in an October 1997 paper, titled "Castro: A Threat to the Security of the United States": "To conduct a bacteriological attack, a country or a terrorist group does not need to have any sophisticated means of delivery, such as a missile. A container the size of a five-pound sugar bag can bring bacteriological materials capable of causing over 50,000 causalities in an urban area, depending on the flow of air and atmospheric conditions."

In the same paper, Dr. Cereijo states, "Many Cuban engineers and scientists have been trained by former East Germany, the Soviet Union, North Korea, Iraq, Iran, Vietnam and China."

http://wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=39864
Don't believe everything you think.