Skip to content
Animal Animal WelfareRights, Science

‘Food theft’ among seabirds could be transmission point for deadly avian flu

UNSW Sydney 3 mins read

If seabirds can catch avian flu by stealing food from infectious birds, it gives scientists a clue where to monitor for outbreaks among these vulnerable birds.

 

The deadly H5N1 avian influenza virus, which has killed millions of birds worldwide since 2021 – and in rare cases can be transmitted to humans – may be spread through the food-stealing behaviour of some seabirds.

A study published today in the journal Conservation Letters highlights food theft – also known as ‘kleptoparasitism’, where some seabird species like frigatebirds and skuas force other birds to regurgitate their prey – as a possible transmission path for the spread of avian flu.

Led by scientists from UNSW Sydney’s Centre for Ecosystem Science and involving BirdLife International, Deakin University, and Monash University, the researchers analysed existing information about frigatebird and skua distribution, behaviour and movements, while searching through a global database for records of them contracting the virus. They also looked at the literature available to see which species of seabird the frigatebirds and skua target with kleptoparasitism.

Lead author Simon Gorta from UNSW Science says the study could provide a new focus in determining how and where the spread of the deadly virus may originate and how it could be transmitted among individuals, populations, and at the continental or ocean-basin scale.

“Understanding transmission is critical to monitoring and management efforts, particularly when at-risk species or regions are involved, and it’s helpful to understand threats to other animals and people,” says lead author Simon Gorta, a PhD student with UNSW.

“While the original H5N1 virus first emerged in 1996, the current 2.3.4.4b strain has spread far more than other strains, and is highly virulent, killing hundreds of thousands of wild seabirds since being first detected in 2021.”

Previously restricted largely to Eurasia and Africa, the virus spread to North America in 2021 and South America in late 2022. It reached Antarctica in early 2024, and has been declared a panzootic – a pandemic among animals.

 

Seabirds at risk and capable of transmitting the disease

Marine species, such as seabirds, have been particularly hard-hit by the panzootic.

“As one of the most threatened groups of birds on the planet, the fact that seabirds have proven to be particularly vulnerable to diseases like this is of great concern,” says co-author A/Prof. Rohan Clarke from Monash University.

Co-author Professor Richard Kingsford says the seabirds are especially vulnerable because of the way they group when breeding.

“Transmission among seabirds is a real concern because of their close contact and potential contamination of communal resources on densely-packed breeding islands, as well as particular behaviours like predation and scavenging of infected individuals,” he says.

But now the researchers say another behaviour may play an important role here: food theft or “kleptoparasitism”. This is a widespread behaviour in seabirds, commonly practiced by frigatebirds and skuas which the researchers focused on in their study.

This process involves a kleptoparasitic bird stealing food from another bird by forcing it to regurgitate its prey. If the bird the kleptoparasite targets is infected, the regurgitated food item could be coated in saliva with a high viral load, which could then infect the kleptoparasite, which in turn could infect others.

The researchers highlighted that this pathway of transmission could lead to transmission of the disease into new populations, but could also be carried long distances if birds become infectious on migration.

“Many seabirds, including these kleptoparasitic species, cover tens of thousands of kilometres in their migrations,” says Alex Berryman, Red List Officer for BirdLife International.

“If kleptoparasites become infected during these migrations and come into contact with other individuals in a way that can facilitate transmission soon after, the disease could spread into new, threatened, and previously unexposed populations and regions.”

 

Early detection is key

While the H5N1 2.3.4.4b has not yet reached Australia, monitoring for early detection of the disease when it arrives – rather than if – is underway.

"Birds globally are already under greater threat than ever before – it is critical the risk posed by bird flu is properly researched and managed," Mr Gorta says.

“We have identified that migratory kleptoparasites, alongside predatory and scavenging species, could be some of the first species to become infected when H5N1 reaches Australia.”

These insights will contribute to the coordinated management of avian influenza in Australia, including the National Avian Influenza Wild Bird Surveillance Program.

The researchers say this is important for guiding Australia’s preparedness for the arrival of the disease on its shores, including vulnerable subantarctic islands.


Contact details:

Lachlan Gilbert

UNSW News & Content

t: +61 404 192 367
e:
[email protected]

More from this category

  • Environment, Science
  • 17/03/2026
  • 05:00
The Climate Council

New report: Aussies flung from summer fires to floods in breakneck climate whiplash

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - MARCH 17 2026 A new Climate Council reportout todayfinds record global levels of coal, oil and gas pollution are overtaking natural climate drivers like El Niño and La Niña – accelerating the “climate whiplash” phenomenon that flings communities rapidly from one disaster to the next. The report Breakneck Speed: Summer of Climate Whiplash warns that even a cooling La Niña couldn’t prevent record heat and catastrophic fires across Australia this past summer. Key Climate Whiplash Events (Dec 2025 – Feb 2026) Victoria – A week after catastrophic fire weather warnings, communities along the Great Ocean Road…

  • Contains:
  • Animal Animal WelfareRights, Indigenous
  • 16/03/2026
  • 16:00
Coalition Against Duck Shooting

Premier Jacinta Allan will have the blood of some 300,000 native waterbirds on her hands following this year’s duck shooting season.

Rescuers will be on the Kerang wetlands in north west Victoria Laurie Levy, Campaign Director, today said: “The late 1950s Liberal Premier Sir Henry Bolte would today be proud of Victoria’s Left-leaning Labor Premier Jacinta Allan who will again have the blood of some 300,000 native waterbirds on her hands”. “Allowing a duck shooting season to proceed following Victoria’s bushfires that took a terrible toll of Victoria’s native wildlife, Premier Allan has again bowed to the wishes of a dwindling number of duck shooters, who make up less than 0.2 per cent of all Victorians and her two powerful Union…

  • Indigenous, Science
  • 16/03/2026
  • 09:13
UNSW Sydney

Gayini: where science meets traditional knowledge in restoring former cotton country

Traditional Owners, UNSW scientists, government and conservation groups join forces to get Gayini wetlands thriving again. Gayini – meaning “water” in the Nari Nari…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.