State agriculture officials confirmed Tuesday that a dairy farm in Maricopa County tested positive for bird flu – Arizona's first detection of the virus in milk. The Arizona Department of Agriculture ...
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Hosted on MSNFarmers embrace zero-grazing innovations at Harvest Money ExpoHundreds of people flocked to the zero-grazing training today, with many struggling to find a place to sit. Nonetheless, they took to the floor, eager to listen as Dr Jolly Kabirizi, the facilitator, ...
Another spillover of the H5N1 bird flu virus from wild birds to dairy cattle appears to have occurred, this time in Arizona.
This week, for the first time in Ohio history, a man living a little more than an hour northwest of Dayton tested positive for bird flu.
Bird flu has been detected in Arizona dairy cattle milk, and a dairy farm has been placed under quarantine as a precaution, according to officials.
Nevada confirmed its first human case of bird flu, from the same strain, D1.1, that killed a Louisiana man in January.
A sample of milk from a herd of dairy cows in Maricopa County has tested positive for H5N1 avian influenza, or bird flu, according to the Arizona Department of Agriculture.
Ariz., is talking to farmers and consumers about what President Donald Trump's tariff agenda could mean at home.
Bird flu was recently detected in milk produced by an Arizona dairy herd for the first time, officials announced Friday.
Pennsylvania has become the first major dairy-producing state in the United States to be declared free of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI) in its milk supply, according to the USDA. […] ...
It also could mean there are more “virus–infected dairy cattle in states where infection in dairy cattle has not yet been ...
James Dykstra asked Justin Kover his plans for his 40-dairy-goat herd. Korver responded that someday he and his wife Brittany ...
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