Weekly eNewsletter

November 18, 2024

Vol. 339

This Week's Top Stories:




Upcoming Events:

Submit your event to WLIC!

Trivia:



As of November 15, how many confirmed cases of HPAI in dairy herds were there in the past 30 days? 


Bulk Milk Testing for HPAI After Push from Industry

Every three years, the Wisconsin Department of Agriculture requires active livestock premises registrations to be renewed to ensure that information remains up-to-date for state animal health officials. WLIC welcomes current livestock owners to contact WLIC to renew their existing registration as the 2025 renewal is underway!


Wisconsin livestock owners are welcome to complete an online form, available on WLIC’s website at wiid.org or to call WLIC to provide these updates, or watch for an email with instructions to review and update their information online. Ensuring livestock owner information remains up-to-date enables Wisconsin state animal health officials to quickly mitigate the risk of an animal disease outbreak and to quickly communicate vital information with livestock owners efficiently. 

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Available Resources Regarding H5N1

State and federal resources are linked below, including an interactive map to view how many confirmed cases of H5N1 in the U.S. given various timeframes.


It is important for livestock owners to be vigilant in their biosecurity protocols.


Producers should continue to enhance their biosecurity efforts and monitor and control disease in their herds and flocks. To report herds with unexplained symptoms, veterinarians should contact DATCP at (608) 224-4872 (business hours) or (800) 943-0003 (after hours and weekends).

Visit DATCP's HPAI in Dairy Cattle Webpage

Risk of HPAI to Exposed Dairy Workers

In coordination with state health departments in Michigan and Colorado, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) tested blood from people who were exposed to dairy cows with H5N1 bird flu infection, also known as highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI).


Eight of the 115 people tested (7% of participants) showed evidence of recent H5N1 virus infection. Only four of those eight remembered feeling sick or had symptoms.


All eight of the workers reported cleaning the milking parlor as a regular task. Only one individual said they worked with cows known to be infected with H5N1. None of the workers with signs of infection reported using the recommended personal protective equipment (PPE), and the use of recommended PPE was low among all 115 workers tested.


The blood tests reveal H5N1 was present in more individuals than what was known, as previously only two dairy workers in Michigan and one in Colorado had been confirmed through other detection methods.

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Q3 Wins for Pork Industry

In the third edition of the State of the Pork Industry Report, Farm Journal’s PORK editor Jennifer Shike joins Cara Haden, veterinarian with Pipestone; Randy Kuker, director of swine production for The Equity; Adam Annegers, sow production manager at JBS; and Brad Eckberg, product subject matter expert with MetaFarms, to compare Q3 2024 sow and grow-finish data (obtained by MetaFarms from July 1 to Sept. 30) to what the experts are seeing in the barns.


Watch or listen to their entire discussion on YouTube. These experts share takeaways from Q3 and how understanding percentiles can help your farm be more profitable now and in the future.


"There is a lot of positivity in the pork industry right now that can be attributed to higher farrowing rates this year, as well as higher born alive and lower stillborn numbers,” Eckberg says. “We saw a decrease in sow mortality by 1.2% from the from the same time last year.”


This positive reduction in sow mortality is significant for the industry, that will likely see the first yearly decline in almost six years of collecting sow mortality data, Eckberg adds. He believes extra focus on animal husbandry and animal welfare has helped the industry make improvements.


Meanwhile, Haden points out the decrease in porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) is contributing to the reduction in sow mortality, too. From 2011-2012, the PRRS incidence rate was 40%. In 2023-2024, the PRRS incidence rate was less than 20%.

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Navigating HPAI as a Dairy Farmer

The first person who will notice illness in the herd is the one who works hands-on with the cows. It’s a cow that just looks off, a drop in production or changes in cow activity and behavior that triggers a call to the vet, monitoring or treating. Treatment is on a case-by-case basis, depending on which cow it is and what’s going on.


But for matters of trade and human health, the health of the entire U.S. herd must be addressed systematically. Rosemary B. Sifford, DVM; Deputy Administrator; USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service says disease monitoring actually looks very similar on the state and national level. “Except, of course, we’re looking across all the herds. In some cases, we do have surveillance programs in place for diseases that we that we know are of concern for us.”


She adds, “Our trade partners are very interested in what controls we put in place and how we eradicate diseases, so we share that information, and that helps to build their confidence, and allows us to trade, even sometimes in the face of an outbreak.”

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Trivia:


As of November 15, how many confirmed cases of HPAI were there in the past 30 days? 


Answer: 


A total of 186 new confirmed cases in U.S. dairy herds across three states, as of reports on November 15. California accounts for 171 of these cases. 


Have you renewed your livestock premises yet?

Renew today here!


Total premises

renewed in 2024:


2,181

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Upcoming Events:

Nov 20 - Dairy Innovation Hub Dairy Summit


Dec 3 - Producing Quality Beef Workshop


Dec 6-9 - WFBF Annual Meeting & YFA Conference


Dec 17-18 - Wisconsin Water and Soil Health Conference


Feb 12 - Producing Quality Beef Workshop


Feb 26 - Producing Quality Beef Workshop


Feb 28 - Producing Quality Beef Workshop

WLIC Members
Being a small non-profit, WLIC relies on memberships and sponsorships to further academic programs and events to educate on livestock traceability, identification, and premises ID. We sincerely thank our Industry and Individual partners for their continuous support of WLIC.
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