Search Site   
Current News Stories
Higher temps in the Midwest are affecting the cream production
Trump adjusts tariffs on some agricultural equipment imports
Agriculture and Illinois’s McHenry County, where many treasures can be found
Agriculture and Illinois’s McHenry County, where many treasures can be found
Take measures to protect corn and other crops from young raccoons, groundhogs
Farmers should weigh benefits of cover crops with cost, yield
Antique Cretors popcorn wagon still popping after 100 years
Tennessee’s Century Farms recognized for enduring agricultural legacy
Bryer Nelson elected president of Illinois FFA during state convention
Damage extensive in northern Indiana from tornado outbreak
USW sees strong exports to Indonesia since MOU signing
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
ASF found on German farm

 
BERLIN (AP) – A pig farm in northern Germany has begun culling all of its 4,000 animals after a case of African swine fever (ASF) was confirmed there.
The outbreak near Guestrow, about 115 miles northwest of Berlin, is the first at a large pig farm in Germany. Cases in wild boars were first reported in Germany last year.
African swine fever is usually deadly for pigs but doesn’t affect humans. It has spread in several European countries, leading to large-scale culls of wild boars and farmed pigs.
German farmers had been dreading the arrival of swine fever because of the impact it will have on the pork industry, particularly lucrative exports to Asia.
Denmark, another major pork exporter, recently stepped up measures to prevent African swine fever entering the country from neighboring Germany.
Officials said it was still unclear how the disease entered the farm near Guestrow.
11/23/2021