Pathogenic Avian Influenza (H5N1) Wild Bird Surveillance

Mike Gong - Data Analysis and Visualization

127
Recent Detections (Oct-Nov 2025)
18
States Affected
EA H5N1
Dominant Strain
82
Bird Species Detected

1. Underlying Data: State-Level Detection Summary (2024-2025)

Aggregated HPAI detection data from USDA APHIS surveillance program, including both active surveillance (hunter harvest) and passive surveillance (mortality events).

State Q1 2024 Q2 2024 Q3 2024 Q4 2024 Q1 2025 Oct-Nov 2025 Total
California 67 89 45 134 78 23 436
Minnesota 89 112 34 98 56 11 400
Wisconsin 76 98 41 87 52 17 371
South Dakota 58 92 28 81 49 16 324
Washington 54 67 38 73 43 18 293
North Dakota 63 84 26 68 38 9 288
Oregon 47 61 33 59 36 14 250
Iowa 56 72 21 54 32 8 243
Montana 44 59 23 49 28 7 210
Michigan 48 61 19 43 29 4 204
New York 42 56 18 38 26 7 187
Illinois 38 51 16 34 23 6 168
Nebraska 35 48 14 31 21 5 154
Kansas 32 44 13 28 19 5 141
Virginia 29 40 12 26 18 9 134
Pennsylvania 27 37 11 24 17 6 122
Ohio 24 34 10 21 15 4 108
Maryland 21 30 9 19 13 6 98
TOTAL 850 1,135 411 966 613 169 4,144

Species-Level Detection Data (Top 20 Species, 2024-2025)

Species Name Species Group Total Detections Peak Season Primary Flyway States Detected
Mallard Waterfowl 342 May (Spring) Mississippi 8
Canada Goose Waterfowl 298 April-May Mississippi 7
Northern Pintail Waterfowl 234 May-June Pacific 7
Snow Goose Waterfowl 201 March-April Central 8
American Wigeon Waterfowl 187 May Pacific 6
Sandhill Crane Shorebird 167 April Central 7
Northern Shoveler Waterfowl 156 May Pacific 6
Bald Eagle Raptor 147 June-July All Flyways 8
Green-winged Teal Waterfowl 143 April-May Mississippi 6
Blue-winged Teal Waterfowl 128 May-June Mississippi 5
Gadwall Waterfowl 119 May Central 6
Red-tailed Hawk Raptor 112 July All Flyways 7
Wood Duck Waterfowl 97 May-June Atlantic 5
American Coot Shorebird 94 May Pacific 6
Tundra Swan Waterfowl 89 March-April Atlantic 5
Black Vulture Scavenger 81 July-Aug Atlantic 6
Great Horned Owl Raptor 78 July All Flyways 6
Redhead Waterfowl 76 April Central 5
Ring-billed Gull Shorebird 73 April-May Mississippi 7
Lesser Scaup Waterfowl 68 March-April Mississippi 6
TOTAL (Top 20 Species) 2,849 68.8% of all detections

Note: Species-level data includes taxonomic classification, seasonal patterns, and geographic distribution. Peak season refers to the month(s) with highest detection rates.

2. Visualization 1: Temporal Trends in HPAI Detection

Key Findings

Seasonal Pattern: Detection rates peak during spring (Q2: April-June) and fall (Q4: October-December), aligning with waterfowl migration periods. Spring peaks are consistently higher, likely due to increased surveillance during nesting seasons. Summer months (Q3) show 60-70% declines from peak periods.

Geographic Hot Spots: California and Minnesota maintain the highest detection rates throughout the observation period, reflecting their positions along the Pacific and Mississippi flyways where waterfowl populations converge.

2025 Trends: October-November 2025 shows lower detection numbers compared to historical Q4 averages, potentially indicating improved surveillance strategies or natural variation in viral prevalence.

3. Visualization 2: Interactive Species Distribution Analysis

Key Findings

Species Vulnerability: Waterfowl (mallards, Canada geese, northern pintails) show the highest detection rates (200-350+ cases), serving as natural reservoir hosts. Raptors demonstrate moderate rates (80-150 cases), primarily through predation on infected waterfowl.

Temporal Clustering: Waterfowl detections concentrate during migration periods (spring/fall), while raptors show year-round exposure patterns, indicating continuous transmission risk through their hunting behavior.

Interactive Insights: Filter by species groups to reveal distinct patterns—waterfowl show bimodal temporal distribution, while raptors display more uniform temporal spread throughout the year.

4. Visualization 3: Flyway-to-Species Transmission Flow

Key Findings

Flyway Pathways: The Mississippi Flyway shows the highest transmission volume (1,218 detections), channeling virus through Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa primarily into waterfowl populations. The Pacific Flyway (979 detections) concentrates in California and Washington, with more diverse species involvement including seabirds.

Species Bottlenecks: Waterfowl serve as the primary transmission vector across all flyways, accounting for 68% of all detections. Secondary transmission to raptors occurs predominantly in states with high waterfowl burden, indicating predator-prey transmission dynamics.

Regional Specialization: Each flyway shows distinct species composition—Pacific states have higher seabird involvement, while Central and Mississippi flyways are dominated by prairie waterfowl species. This suggests targeted surveillance strategies should be flyway-specific.

5. Visualization 4: Geographic Distribution of HPAI Burden

Key Findings

Regional Concentration: The top ten states account for approximately 68% of all documented wild bird HPAI detections. California leads with 436 cases, followed by Minnesota (400) and Wisconsin (371), aligning with major migratory corridors and wetland habitats.

Flyway Distribution: The Pacific flyway (California, Washington, Oregon: 979 total) and Mississippi flyway (Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan: 1,218 total) show balanced burden, suggesting HPAI H5N1 has established endemic circulation across multiple independent migratory routes.

Surveillance Implications: The gradient from high-burden states (400+ detections) to moderate-burden states (200-300 detections) indicates successful broad geographic coverage, though standardizing surveillance by wetland acreage would provide more accurate risk assessments.