Deadly bird flu strain found in dead German cat

Soldiers of the German armed forces in protection suits carry plastic bags with the remains of dead birds found on a field near…

Soldiers of the German armed forces in protection suits carry plastic bags with the remains of dead birds found on a field near the village of Waase at the Baltic island of Ruegen. German officials have found a dead cat infected with the H5N1 bird f

German officials have found a dead cat infected with a form of the H5N1 bird flu virus, the Federal Research Institute for Animal Health said today.

The institute said it was still doing tests to see whether the virus was the deadly strain that has led to sickness and deaths among humans in Turkey and Asia.

It said the cat was found at the weekend on the island of Ruegen off Germany's northern coast, the same location where the virus was first identified in birds earlier this month.

The finding may increase concern that the virus could spread to other species in Europe as it has in a number of cases in other parts of the world.

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"It has been known for some time that cats can become infected by eating infected birds," Thomas Mettenleiter, the institute's president said.

A number of big cats in Asian zoos have died after being fed with infected birds and domestic cats have been shown to be particularly vulnerable to the disease, the institute said.

However it added that there had so far been no known case of a human becoming infected by a cat.

Health experts were dispatched today to the southern Bahamas island of Inagua to find out if an unexplained spate of bird deaths was linked to the deadly bird flu virus.

Over the past two days, 15 of the island's famed flamingos, five roseate spoonbills and one cormorant, have been found dead with no external injuries on the island just north of Haiti.

Agencies