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Tom Wilkinson, PA & Sophie Finnegan

'Wildlife tragedy' as bird flu devastates vital colony with thousands dying on Farne Islands

A series of horrifying photos have been released showing the huge scale of an "unprecedented wildlife tragedy" as a bird flu outbreak devastates the Farne Islands.

The scenic islands off the Northumberland coast are home to 23 species, including puffins, with 200,000 birds living there. But since the outbreak, rangers wearing white protective suits have so far collected more than 3,000 dead birds for incineration.

They also fear that many thousands more have succumbed to the deadly disease and fallen off the cliffs into the North Sea. The Farnes, which are looked after by the National Trust, are an internationally-important habitat for the species that live there.

Read more: Northumberland coast view named one of the top five in the UK

Rangers working for the trust have been removing dead bird carcasses to prevent further contamination and for their own safety, wore white hazmat suits, gloves, and masks. Cliff-nesting birds seemed to be the worst affected by the bird flu outbreak, with guillemots, kittiwakes, and young puffins known as pufflings among those recovered.

Some of the dead birds were ringed and the casualties include an eight-year-old Arctic tern which would have flown from the Farne Islands to Antarctica and back eight times during its lifetime, covering 144,000 miles. Also discovered was a 16-year-old kittiwake that was ringed on the islands in 2006.

The National Trust team of rangers clear deceased birds from Staple Island, one of the Outer Group of the Farne Islands, off the coast of Northumberland, where bird flu is having a devastating effect on seabird colonies (Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)

Annually, 45,000 people take a trip to the Farnes but the islands were closed to visitors at the start of this month. Farnes' general manager Simon Lee said: "The welfare of our staff, volunteers, and visitors is our top priority as we navigate this unprecedented wildlife tragedy on the islands.

"The National Trust has cared for the Farne Islands for just under 100 years, and there are no records of anything so potentially damaging to our already endangered seabird colonies.

"The Farne Islands is a National Nature Reserve and home to approximately 200,000 seabirds, including guillemots, kittiwakes, razorbills, and shags in addition to Arctic terns and puffins.

"We closed the islands to limit disturbance to the birds and are monitoring the situation daily. Our team of rangers are working hard to minimise the spread of the disease amongst the island’s precious wildlife."

This strain of bird flu originated in east Asia and affected domestic flocks in the UK over the winter but it has since spread across the country to infect wild birds. It spreads when birds come into direct contact with an infected bird, faeces, body fluids, or indirectly via food and water.

The National Trust team of rangers clear deceased birds from Staple Island, one of the Outer Group of the Farne Islands, off the coast of Northumberland, where bird flu is having a devastating effect on seabird colonies (Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)

The risk to humans is considered to be very low and people are rarely affected. The National Trust has since called on the Government to act.

Ben McCarthy, the Trust’s head of nature conservation and restoration ecology, said: "This disease is undoing decades of hard work to restore nature and undermines the Government’s own targets to reverse the decline of our threatened species and improve their habitats.

"The scale of this disaster calls for an urgent National Response Plan for the virus in wild birds. We need a more co-ordinated approach to ensure effective monitoring, surveillance, and reporting to support research into the impacts this deadly disease is having on our wild birds across the UK."

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