Secretary of Agriculture Mike Naig told DTN that Iowa is the only state doing this kind of testing by drawing a surveillance zone within a 20-kilometer (approximately 12.4 miles) radius around a positive dairy site and testing farms within that zone.
“In Iowa, we have to look at these cases a little different since we have such a large poultry industry and the viruses found in dairy cows and poultry are connected,” he said. “There are three poultry sites in northwest Iowa that have top-notch biosecurity and they have tested positive. We really want to try to figure out how the virus spreads.”
The United States Department of Agriculture has a strong presence in Iowa with epidemiological teams and wildlife services doing testing at the positive sites. Naig said several research projects are also being conducted by USDA and Iowa State University College of Veterinary Medicine to find the interaction between animals.
POSITIVE CASES CAUSE LOSSES
Legal notice about Intellectual Property in digital contents. All information contained in these pages that is NOT owned by eDairy News and is NOT considered “public domain” by legal regulations, are registered trademarks of their respective owners and recognized by our company as such. The publication on the eDairy News website is made for the purpose of gathering information, respecting the rules contained in the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works; in Law 11.723 and other applicable rules. Any claim arising from the information contained in the eDairy News website shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Ordinary Courts of the First Judicial District of the Province of Córdoba, Argentina, with seat in the City of Córdoba, excluding any other jurisdiction, including the Federal.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
eDairy News Spanish
eDairy News PORTUGUESE