"While the timing of this detection is a bit sooner than we anticipated, we have been preparing for a resurgence of [the] avian influenza we dealt with this spring," said Dr Shauna Voss, the board's senior veterinarian. "HPAI is here and biosecurity is the first line of defence to protect your birds."
The Indiana State Board of Animal Health reported that a small hobby flock of chickens, ducks and geese in northern Indiana's Elkhart County tested presumptively positive on Tuesday, though final confirmation from a federal lab was pending.
Across the country, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), 414 flocks in 39 states have been affected since February, costing producers over 40 million birds, mostly commercial turkeys and chickens. The disease has struck 81 Minnesota flocks this year, requiring the killing of nearly 2.7 million birds.
Minnesota produces more turkeys annually than any other state.
This year's outbreak contributed to a spike in egg and meat prices and killed an alarming number of bald eagles and other wild birds. It also affected some zoos. It appeared to be waning in June, but officials warned then that another surge could take hold this autumn.
The disease is typically carried by migrating birds. It only occasionally affects humans, such as farm workers, and the USDA keeps poultry from infected flocks out of the food supply. A widespread outbreak in 2015 killed 50 million birds across 15 states and cost the federal government more than $1 billion.