Search Site   
Current News Stories
Schaefer’s Farm Market and CSA has grown after humble start
Trump’s tariff pause ends; letters sent to more than 20 trading partners
Farmers may need to find other sources of income in a tough year
Farmer moves to town; city folk move to the country
Farm Foundation Forum examines rural hospital closures
Farm Foundation Forum looks at how agriculture shapes communities
Quarterly grazing seminars will help farmers with peer to peer info
IDNR stocks 12 lakes with striped bass, hybrid striped bass
FFA chapter members share list of tractor uses
Ports of Indiana selects Louis Dreyfus Co. to operate grain terminal
June’s swine inventory is highest since 2020 with 75.1 million head
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Animal transports banned in German region after foot-and-mouth disease detected
 
BERLIN (AP) – Animal transports were banned in a state surrounding Berlin on Jan. 11 and the capital’s two zoos closed as a precaution after foot-and-mouth disease was detected in a buffalo herd just outside the city, Germany’s first outbreak for more than 35 years.
Authorities in Brandenburg state, which surrounds Berlin, said Jan. 10 that a farmer found three of a 14-strong herd of water buffalo dead in Hoenow, just outside the capital’s city limits. Germany’s national animal health institute confirmed that foot-and-mouth disease had been detected in samples from one animal, and the rest of the herd was slaughtered. It wasn’t clear how the animals were infected.
A 72-hour ban on transporting cows, pigs, sheep, goats and other animals such as camels and llamas in Brandenburg went into force on the 11th. Berlin’s two zoos closed starting Jan. 11 as a preventive measure. Their management noted in a statement that while the virus isn’t dangerous to humans, it can stick to their clothing and be transmitted.
Authorities said that around 200 pigs at a farm in Ahrensfelde, near where the outbreak was detected, would be slaughtered as a precaution.
Foot-and-mouth disease is caused by a virus that infects cattle, sheep, goats, swine and other cloven-hoofed animals. While death rates are typically low, the disease can make animals ill with fever, decreased appetite, excessive drooling, blisters and other symptoms.
The virus spreads easily through contact and airborne transmission and can quickly infect entire herds. People can spread the disease though things like farming equipment, shoes, clothing and vehicle tires that have come into contact with the virus.
The last outbreak in Germany was in 1988 and the last in Europe in 2011, according to Germany’s animal health institute.
1/20/2025