I have been volunteering at the Wild Bird Rehab Center  and they have been 
seeing large numbers of crows coming in with West Nile virus.  Most of them 
die. There are also chickadees and other birds being brought in  with the 
virus. Debbie Strimple has difficulty getting the powers that be to be  
interested in the number of birds lost to the disease, they are only focusing  
and 
reporting on the human impact.
   Deb Carstensen, Arapahoe County
 
 
In a message dated 8/23/2012 3:37:49 P.M. Mountain Daylight Time,  
seet...@gmail.com writes:

I have  been seeing more of the species that were hardest hit by the West 
Nile Virus  in the past several weeks and none were dead or appeared ill.  I 
have  been pleased with the recovery, finally, of Black-billed Magpies in my 
area  which has been very slow.  I saw a number of Black-capped Chickadees 
in  Canon City today, another species whose recovery has been slow.  And I  
have seen a lot of American Crows and a few Common Ravens around southeast  
Colorado in the past few weeks, all appearing healthy.

Is it  possible  for birds that survived the first exposure to it to convey 
some  resistance to West Nile Virus to their offspring?

SeEtta Moss
Canon City
Blogging for Birds and Blooms magazine @ 
_http://birdsandbloomsblog.com/author/seetta-moss/_ 
(http://birdsandbloomsblog.com/author/seetta-moss/) 
Personal  blog @ _BirdsAndBlooms.blogspot.com_ 
(http://birdsandblooms.blogspot.com/) 


On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 2:50 PM, James Wilson <_iceaxe5@gmail.com_ 
(mailto:icea...@gmail.com) > wrote:

As many of you have heard, we are experiencing a high  level of West Nile 
transmission to humans this season.  Interestingly,  we have not seen reports 
of bird die-offs as we did during the initial  emergence of the virus.  If 
anyone on the list has information to the  contrary, we would be quite 
interested!


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