Open accessibility guideSkip to sections navigationSkip to contentSkip to footerThe Sydney Morning Herald logoThe Sydney Morning Herald logoAdvertisementNationalThe desperate effort to prevent a bird flu outbreak has widened, with authorities testing two dead seabirds found in South Australia.Updated June 23, 2026 — 4:47pm,first published 4:45pmLoadingLatest in VideosVideo icon0:41Shark spotted offshore of popular Sydney beachVideo icon0:35NAS' Gladiator stunt causes intense faceoffVideo icon2:23Robodebt class action settlement approvedVideo icon1:13Socceroos midfielder 'in absolute bits'AdvertisementThe Sydney Morning Herald logoTwitterFacebookInstagramRSSOur SitesThe Sydney Morning HeraldThe AgeBrisbane TimesWAtodayThe Australian Financial Reviewnine.com.auDriveClassifiedsTributesPlace your adThe Sydney Morning HeraldContact & supportAdvertise with usNewslettersAccessibility guideSitemapPhoto salesPurchase front pagesContent licensingWork with usTerms of usePrivacy policyPress CouncilCharter of Editorial IndependenceAI Editorial GuidelinesProducts & ServicesSubscription packagesMy accountSubscriber FAQsDelivery statusToday’s PaperGood Food GuideDaily PuzzlesCopyright © 2026Subscribe
Bird flu surveillance ramps up after fears it has reached SA
The desperate effort to prevent a bird flu outbreak has widened, with authorities testing two dead seabirds found in South Australia.
South Australia escalates bird flu surveillance after discovering two dead seabirds, widening prevention efforts against potential outbreak. Distributed disease monitoring networks require resilient data pipelines and inter-agency protocols—essential for supply chain risk management and workforce continuity in tech-dependent industries.











