Search Site   
Current News Stories
Started as a learning tool, Old World Garden Farms is growing
Petitions for Indiana Corn Marketing Council board seats open until June 1
Nuisance grass giant miscanthus shows promise as biomass crop
Senator Rand Paul introduces Hemp Safety Enforcement Act
March cattle feedlot placements are the second lowest since 1996
Public comment encouraged for proposed changes to several rules
Purdue researchers to examine early pregnancy loss in cattle
Wisconsin remains number one producer of cheese in the U.S. 
Tornado ravaged dairy farm begins recovery with help from neighbors
Indiana off-grid barndominium hammered at $620,000 at Bright Star auction
How northeast Ohio is rewriting the rules of value-added agriculture
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Greece orders goat, sheep restrictions in light of deadly viral outbreak
 
ATHENS, Greece (AP) – Authorities in Greece ordered nationwide restrictions for goat and sheep July 29 to combat a deadly viral outbreak that is a fresh blow to the domestic livestock industry.
Costas Tsiaras, the minister of agriculture and rural development, announced the ban on the commercial slaughter of goats and sheep as well as movement for reproduction – expanding measures already in effect in parts of central Greece where the outbreak was first reported.
Also known as the “goat plague,” the PPR virus is a highly contagious disease affecting goats and sheep, causing severe illness and death. It has no adverse effect on human health, according to Greek officials.
So far, some 7,000 animals in herds where the disease has been identified have been culled in the hardest-hit central Thessaly region, with another 1,200 to be added early this week, regional governor Dimitris Kouretas said.
Thessaly was also hit by a deadly storm last September that caused severe flooding and widespread damage to livestock farming.
The World Organization for Animal Health, an intergovernmental body based in Paris, describes PPR as “characterized by severe morbidity and mortality rates” with a high economic impact in parts of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia, where goats and sheep are an important source of food.

8/13/2024