PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Health officials confirmed the bird flu virus has been detected in dairy milk at a Phoenix-area facility and it’s raising questions on how it could affect humans. This is the ...
Another spillover of the H5N1 bird flu virus from wild birds to dairy cattle appears to have occurred, this time in Arizona.
I told him that I’m standing by and ready to go. His team told me that we are supposed to meet the first week in March.” ...
The bird flu is not an exclusive disease for poultry, but can also infect cows, which have seen an uptick in cases recently ...
UC Davis researchers have found that acidification can kill H5N1 in waste milk, providing dairy farmers an affordable, ...
Bird flu has led to a wide variety of symptoms during recent outbreaks, including common flu symptoms like cough and vomiting. Many have also had conjunctivitis or pink eye as their only symptom, ...
Dairy cows can consistently thrive on an optimised, soya-free diet, producing more milk from forage while maintaining milk quality.
In a question and answer format, UC Riverside public policy professor Richard Carpiano and medical school professor Dr.
We talked to experts about where the science is on risks to humans and how the virus is messing with the food supply.
Avian influenza is continuing to plague poultry and dairy farming operations, and with the virus spreading across the country ...
Jayne Sebright, executive director for the Center for Dairy Excellence, analyzes the dairy industry's transition from heifer ...
Three of America’s top milk-producing states are not participating in the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s program designed ...