[Bird Control] How Much of a Health Risk, Really?

Large and long-standing pigeon roosts can present significant health risks to people in the area and to bird control workers and roost cleanup crews.

Editor’s note: This article was adapted from Techletter, a biweekly publication from Pinto & Associates, Mechanicsville, Md. To subscribe, visit www.techletter.com, or call 301/884-3020.

Pest control experts and public health specialists warn that there are dozens of different human pathogens associated with pigeons, including some that can be dangerous or even deadly. Many experts feel that pigeons are a significant health risk to people.

However, pigeon fanciers, wildlife groups and other public health experts scoff at this claim, insisting that the human health risks from pigeons are exaggerated and that pigeons do not pose a significant disease risk to people.
Well, who’s right?
 

What Science Tells Us.
Without a doubt, pigeons carry human pathogens. A study from the University of Basel in Switzerland identified 60 different microorganisms associated with feral pigeons that were capable of causing human disease. Fungi accounted for the majority of microorganisms with 45 represented. Meanwhile, nine of the microorganisms were bacteria, five were viruses and one was a protozoan.

But it’s one thing to carry human pathogens and another to actually transmit them to humans. Clinical case reports and epidemiological studies have been able to demonstrate that pigeons transmit less than 10 of these infectious agents to humans.
 
For some infectious agents, transmission of disease is mostly restricted to people whose immune systems have been suppressed by drugs or disease. Examples include AIDS patients and those getting cancer chemotherapy, making them more vunerable.

For others, human disease has been primarily limited to pigeon fanciers and pigeon racers who spend a lot of time working in pigeon lofts. Ornithosis or psittacosis, caused by the infectious agent Chlamydophila psittaci, is a disease commonly associated with pigeons, yet most cases identified have been restricted to bird fanciers, and more often they have been associated with parrots and budgerigars than with pigeons.


Risk Factors.
To put the overall disease risk in context, pigeons occur by the millions in cities throughout the world, they live in very close association with people, and they carry a long list of human pathogens, yet disease transmission is infrequent. It appears that pigeons pose a much lower risk of disease transmission than, say, rodents or flies.

Yet there are certain situations where studies have shown that feral pigeons do pose significant health risks. Large and long-standing pigeon roosts can present significant health risks to people in the area and to bird control workers and roost cleanup crews. The most significant risks come from the disease organisms causing histoplasmosis and cryptococcosis, which may grow in and under bird droppings. Both are respiratory diseases, usually with no symptoms or mild, flu-like symptoms, but occasionally resulting in serious and even deadly infections.

Histoplasmosis is usually associated with bird (including pigeon) and bat droppings on soil; cryptococcosis with old pigeon roosts in attics, water towers, steeples, cupolas and similar sites on structures. Both diseases are spread when droppings are disturbed and fungal spores (for histoplasmosis) or yeast-like vegetative cells (for cryptococcosis) swirl into the air and are inhaled, either by workers in the area or by people downwind.

There is a lesser-known but also dangerous health threat associated with bird roosts. Allergenic hypersensitivity pneumonitis is a potentially disabling lung disease, not caused by an infectious agent, but by an allergic reaction to airborne debris from bird feathers, droppings and other bird proteins. Experts estimate that anywhere from one to five percent of individuals exposed to bird proteins (antigens) will develop symptoms.
 

Conclusion.
The answer to the question, how much of a disease risk do feral pigeons pose to people, is this: In general, there appears to be little risk to the general public from normal day-to-day contact with pigeons in parks, yards, balconies, etc. However, some groups are at greater risk, and some situations require special safety precautions.

Since people with depressed immune systems are particularly susceptible to some of the human pathogens carried by pigeons, flocks of pigeons should not be tolerated around hospitals, nursing homes, medical clinics, and other similar sites.

Bird work in long-standing pigeon roosts both indoors and outdoors requires special safety precautions to minimize the risk that pest control workers or people in the surrounding areas will inhale dust containing the organisms that cause histoplasmosis or cryptococcosis or allergens associated with the roost.
 

The authors are been an entomology specialist for Texas AgriLife Extension since 1989.



The red-headed woodpecker.Woodpeckers and Carpenter Bees Go Together
Woodpeckers end up pecking on buildings for many reasons. In the springtime, woodpeckers will “drum” on wood or other surfaces to make noise, attract a mate and establish or defend a territory. Woodpeckers also attack softwood siding and trim in an attempt to build their cavity nests. Food is another factor. In the summer they will peck at buildings, cedar siding, soffits, rails and posts trying to fish out insects. Carpenter bee nests are often associated with woodpeckers.

Carpenter bees chew round, dime-sized tunnels into soft, weathered woods. They often tunnel into the unpainted undersides of soffits, eaves or behind rake board. The female carpenter bee constructs an average of six larval cells inside the tunnel. She lays an egg in each and then provides a mass of pollen for the developing larvae to feed on. The larvae pupate inside the tunnel and emerge as adults in late summer. Woodpeckers can detect the presence of the larvae and will peck away at the nest openings to reach them, usually causing considerable damage.

Keeping woodpeckers away from carpenter bee nest sites usually involves either repellents or exclusion. You can’t kill woodpeckers without a federal permit. Visual repellents such as mylar balloons, reflective tape or pinwheels may work. Repelling noises such as clapping or banging on a garbage can lid may also work. You can try to exclude woodpeckers from an area by hanging netting, hardware cloth or plastic sheeting over the carpenter bee nest sites, or temporarily installing metal flashing over the area.

Fortunately, once the spring mating season is over, the drumming should cease. Woodpeckers may continue to work a bee nest site for awhile even after you have treated the nest and killed the larvae. After treating and plugging the bee’s nest, spray a taste aversion repellent over the area to discourage future woodpecker attacks.
 

— Larry Pinto and Sandy Kraft

April 2011
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