News

Chicken and ground beef notched record-breaking prices in June, continuing their climb as feed and production costs rise ...
Farm workers facing possible arrest would likely resist getting tested for bird flu should there be a resurgence this fall, ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is considering vaccination plans to protect poultry and cattle, including dairy cows, from ...
Bird flu fears have focused on the poultry and dairy industries and human health. But wild animals are threatened, too—at ...
Bird flu was nearly everywhere in the U.S.—in chickens, cows, pet cats and even humans. Cases have gone down, but experts ...
For months, bird flu was seemingly everywhere in the U.S.: news headlines reported the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza ...
The virus, which scientists call H5N1, has spread like wildfire around the globe in recent years, surprising and horrifying ...
The D1.1 strain of H5N1, aka avian flu, was found in milk from a dairy in Maricopa County. The Arizona Dept. of Agriculture said the danger to the public is low.
The risk to the general public was low. Bird flu was detected in milk produced by a dairy herd in Maricopa County, according to the Arizona Department of Agriculture.
The risk to the public remained low, but people in close contact with dairy cattle may be at an increased risk, the state agriculture department said.