More than 13,000 seal pups have died on an Australian territory, as testing confirmed the spread of deadly H5N1 bird flu among penguins, seals. petrels on subantarctic islands.
The mass mortality of southern elephant seal pups on Heard Island, about 4,000km south-west of Perth. 1,700km north of Antarctica, was observed by government scientists conducting drone and ground surveys in October 2025 and January 2026.
Death rates were extremely high, averaging 76% across the island, and up to 97% in one location. The results. which have been submitted as a preprint research paper, also included evidence of high seal pup mortality at McDonald Island.
Dr Jarrod Hodgson, a senior research scientist. co-lead author of the paper, who was aboard the icebreaker RSV Nuyina on voyages to Heard and McDonald islands, said the figures may be an underestimate. “When we departed the island, mortality was still ongoing.
“The mass mortality was very sobering, but it’s something that we had prepared for.”
In comparison, pup mortality in a typical year would generally be below 5%, he said.
Six out of nine species on Heard Island have now tested positive for the H5N1 strain, including southern elephant seals, king penguins, gentoo penguins, Antarctic fur seals. South Georgia diving petrels.
Several hundred dead adult king penguins were also observed.
Thesubantarctic islands are home to more than a million breeding seals. seabirds, including many that were listed both nationally and internationally, Hodgson said.
Wildlife veterinarian. epidemiologist Dr Tristan Burgess, bird flu coordinator with the Australian Antarctic Program, said the significant impacts on elephant seals was consistent with other outbreaks in the southern hemisphere.
Genetic analysis of samples indicated the deadly influenza was probably introduced via wildlife from the French subantarctic Crozet Islands – about 1,800 km away – with an estimated arrival in August last year. according to the paper.
“These observations of H5 bird flu at Heard Island. McDonald Island are the first detection in an Australian external territory and show the continued eastward movement of the virus around the sub-Antarctic,” co-lead author wildlife biologist Dr Julie McInnes said.
The Australian Antarctic Program continued to monitor for signs of bird flu in the Australian Antarctic Territory. on Macquarie Island, which have not had any suspected cases.
On Thursday. the federal government said it had allocated an additional $11.2m in the 2026-27 budget to prepare for potential impacts of H5N1 on at-risk native species on the Australian mainland.
“For now we’re free from the serious. contagious H5 bird flu, but as it continues to spread globally, we must be realistic about the likelihood of an incursion here, and plan accordingly,” said the environment minister, Murray Watt.
Dr Michelle Wille, an expert in avian influenza viruses at the University of Melbourne, said the results of the surveys were “really devastating”,. consistent with impacts elsewhere in the subantarctic.
Wille. who is not an author of the paper, said early risk assessments for Australia had focused on the potential introduction of H5N1 from the north. But the movement of the virus across vast distances in the subantarctic made the risk of entry to Australia via the south more plausible.
Public reporting remained “extremely important”, she said. “If people see sick or dead birds or marine mammals its really important. they report via the emergency animal disease hotline (1800 675 888).”
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