A mother and child lost their lives in an avalanche on Tuesday while skiing at Pallastunturi in northwestern Finnish Lapland.
The Food Authority noted that it might be possible that foxes are more susceptible to avian flu infections than mink. However, the agency also suggested that infection prevention protocols may not have worked as well at fox farms compared to facilities that raise mink. The authority has now confirmed avian influenza cases at a total of 42 fur farms in Finland.
A high of 14.7 degrees Celsius was measured in the southwestern city of Pori on Monday night.
Train service between Hämeenlinna and Toijala was halted by a fallen tree, while some 13,000 households lost power.
More than 40,000 households faced blackouts overnight.
Reports of symptoms such as diarrhoea and vomiting are being investigated in South Ostrobothnia.
The WWF and locals report sightings of 10-15 eagles at a time in western Finland.
In Northern Ostrobothnia the floods are rising faster, and local emergency services have elicited the help of the military as a precaution, in case some of the ice dams in the riverland should need to be detonated.
BirdLife Finland reports that Finnish populations of the common pochardhave plummeted by 80 percent in 20 years.
The past three winters have been particularly hard on road pavements. Wet winters with temperatures fluctuating on both sides of the freezing point have damaged even relatively fresh asphalt, leading to cracks, potholes and deep ruts.
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