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Twenty big cats die after contracting bird flu at Washington State animal sanctuary

The sanctuary has now begun a months-long sanitation process

Katie Hawkinson
in Washington D.C.
Wednesday 25 December 2024 16:30 EST
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A serval pictured in Kenya. Twenty big cats, including five African servals, died after contracting bird flu at a Washington State sanctuary
A serval pictured in Kenya. Twenty big cats, including five African servals, died after contracting bird flu at a Washington State sanctuary (Getty Images)

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Twenty big cats have died after contracting bird flu at a Washington State animal sanctuary.

The Wild Felid Advocacy Center of Washington in the city of Shelton announced the deaths on December 20. Just two weeks prior, officials confirmed the presence of bird flu in the sanctuary, which forced the center to close and quarantine.

“This tragedy has deeply affected our team, and we are all grieving the loss of these incredible animals,” the center said in a statement on Facebook.

“Now, we turn to the community for support as we focus on the care and recovery of our surviving felids,” the statement continued. “The mounting medical costs, even at discounted rates, have placed a significant financial strain on our sanctuary.”

The sanctuary included a full list of the cats who passed away: Tabbi, a half-Bengal tiger; Crackle, an African caracal; Mouse, a Geoffroy’s cat; Pebbles, a Bengal cat; Thumper, a Eurasian lynx; cougars Hooligan, Holly, Harley and Hannah Wyoming; Canada lynx cats Chuckie and P’uch’ub; bobcats Digger, Willie Bob, Ruffian and Tank; and African servals Nile, Percival, Nefertiti, Blondie and Shasta.

A bobcat pictured at a sanctuary in Colorado. Four bobcats are among those now dead after bird flu swept through the Wild Felid Advocacy Center of Washington
A bobcat pictured at a sanctuary in Colorado. Four bobcats are among those now dead after bird flu swept through the Wild Felid Advocacy Center of Washington (Getty Images)

Caretakers first noticed the cats developing pneumonia-like symptoms in November, The New York Times reports. The virus, unknown at the time, spread quickly. The first cat to die was one of the cougars, while an African serval was the last to die on December 13.

Now, the sanctuary is home to just 17 cats, according to the Times. Workers quickly removed the 8,000 pounds of freezer-stored food to prevent any further infections. Now, they’re working through a sanitation process that could take months to complete, founder and director Mark Mathews told the paper.

“We have to go through and disinfect each habitat,” he said. “Any straw or organic matter needs to come out and be bagged and then burned, and then we have to disinfect again. Then we have to let it set for a couple weeks.”

Bird flu is spreading across the country, mostly impacting poultry flocks and dairy herds. California declared a state of emergency last week due to the spread of bird flu in the state, and more than 60 people have contracted the virus across the US.

Health officials recently announced that a person in Louisiana has the first recorded case of severe illness caused by bird flu in the nation. The patient had been around sick and dead birds in backyard flocks.

The person has been hospitalized.

“While the current public health risk for the general public is low, people who work with birds, poultry or cows, or have recreational exposure to them, are at higher risk,” the Louisiana Department of Health said earlier this month.

However, there has been no human-to-human transmission of bird flu reported in the US to date.

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