A brown skua, found dying on a remote stretch of the Western Australian coast, has done what years of surveillance had braced for. On June 20 the strain of highly pathogenic bird flu that has killed wild birds and marine mammals on every other continent was confirmed in Australia for the first time.

Australia was the last continent on Earth free of the H5N1 lineage known as clade 2.3.4.4b, the most destructive animal pathogen of the present era. The virus did not come down the Asian migratory flyways that biosecurity planners had watched for years. It came from the south, out of Antarctica, riding seabirds that had picked it up on subantarctic islands where it has been killing seals by the thousand.

The bird was found at Cape Le Grand National Park near Esperance, about 700 kilometers southeast of Perth, and the detection was confirmed by CSIRO’s Australian Centre for Disease Preparedness. A southern giant petrel found in the same region is suspected also to be positive, after a preliminary result at the Western Australian government lab, and was sent for confirmatory testing. The government reported no detections in poultry and no evidence of deaths in other species, and said the finding does not change Australia’s status as free from the disease in poultry under international standards. For now that holds.

This is not Australia’s first encounter with avian influenza, though earlier episodes involved different strains of the virus. The country spent much of 2024 fighting bird flu in poultry, most of it the H7 subtype, recording 16 outbreaks of highly pathogenic influenza that year against only seven in the preceding four decades and culling roughly 1.8 million birds to stamp out infected and exposed flocks. It also recorded its first human H5N1 case in 2024, a toddler infected in India who recovered fully.

Neither of the 2024 events was caused by this virus. The skua marks the first time the global 2.3.4.4b panzootic itself has reached Australian soil.

How Did It Get In?

For years the working assumption was that H5N1 would enter Australia from the north, carried by migratory birds moving down the East Asian flyway. Ducks and other waterfowl are the most common natural reservoir of avian influenza, and their migrations had carried the virus across most of the world. Australia’s isolation, and one ecological accident in particular, kept it out. As Marcel Klaassen of Deakin University, Meagan Dewar of Federation University and Michelle Wille of the University of Melbourne explain in The Conversation, no duck species routinely migrate between Australia and Asia, and none migrate through Antarctica. The continent’s reservoir hosts simply do not mix with the rest of the world’s.

So the virus took the long way around, and its southern route was already on the record. It reached the Antarctic region in October 2023 in a brown skua at South Georgia, carried down from the tip of South America, then spread island to island across the Southern Ocean over thousands of kilometers. In that case, the carriers were seabirds rather than ducks. Skuas, gulls and giant petrels cross enormous distances over the Southern Ocean, and the virus traveled with them.

By late 2025 it had reached Australia’s subantarctic Heard Island, where it killed an estimated 13,000 elephant seal pups, and from there it crossed to the mainland.

Why the Next Species Infected Is the One to Watch

The dead skua confirms the virus has reached Australia. It does not mean the virus is established here. Skuas and petrels patrol coastlines and feed on carcasses, which makes them useful sentinels but poor candidates to seed a continent on their own. The threshold that would change everything is freshwater ducks. “Once in ducks, the likely spread of the virus increases dramatically, and the outlook would be grim,” the same researchers warned.

Grim because nothing in Australia has met this virus, its wildlife or its farmed flocks. For wildlife the threat is to conservation. Naive populations are where 2.3.4.4b does its worst. It killed up to 47 percent of some northern gannet colonies in 2022, tore through South American sea lions and elephant seals, and gutted seabird cliffs across the North Atlantic. Australia’s fauna is heavily endemic and often range-restricted, which is another way of saying many of its species have nowhere else to be. For poultry the threat is economic. The same strain has forced record culls and pushed up egg prices across North America and Europe, and Australian flocks have no exposure to it.

Where Wildlife, Livestock and Human Health Meet

The skua ties together three things usually managed apart. 2.3.4.4b is a wildlife virus, a livestock virus and a potential human virus all at once, and what it does in one of those worlds shapes the other two.

The wild-bird reservoir is the part no one can manage away. You can depopulate a barn. You cannot depopulate a flyway. Australia’s poultry industry now lives with a standing risk of incursion from wild birds, and its conservation managers with the prospect of die-offs they can track but not prevent.

Human risk stays low for now, with no evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission anywhere. The risk to people turns on what the virus does in mammals. Each seal or sea lion it kills is another chance for it to adapt to mammalian hosts, and that is the path by which an animal disease becomes a human one.

Australia held out longer than any other continent against a virus that has spent five years proving it can live almost anywhere, in almost anything. The question now is not whether it is present but how much of the country’s wildlife it keeps.

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