U.S. orders cow testing for bird flu after grocery milk tests positive

By Alexander Tin

Edited By Ellen Uchimiya

Updated on: April 25, 2024 / 9:56 AM EDT / CBS News

The Agriculture Department is ordering the dairy industry to test milk-producing cows for infections from highly pathogenic avian influenza, or HPAI H5N1, before they’re moved between states, federal officials announced Wednesday.

USDA’s move to ramp up testing requirements for HPAI H5N1 comes after the Food and Drug Administration disclosed Tuesday that samples of pasteurized milk that had been sold on grocery store shelves had tested positive for the virus, prompting further research to verify if the positive test was caused by lingering dead “virus particles” or live infectious virus.

It also comes after federal authorities say they have now spotted some “isolated” but worrying changes to the virus in cows, which are believed by U.S. officials to have contracted the virus from wild birds.

State veterinarians and labs that find that cattle have tested positive for the virus will be required to report their results to the USDA. Farms with cows that are sick will need to undergo investigations before moving cattle across state lines.

“The primary focus of the order, initially, will be lactating cattle. But we will certainly have the opportunity to expand beyond that as necessary,” Mike Watson, head of the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, told reporters Wednesday.

“We should be very clear that the tests that came back positive are for the genetic material of the virus. This could just be virus fragments, what’s left over after pasteurization. And so this by itself is not a reason for alarm,” said Dr. Céline Gounder, a CBS News medical contributor and editor-at-large for public health at KFF Health News. “There are additional tests being done to see is this live infectious virus or is this just the dead virus we would expect to see.”

If this is simply the leftovers after the pasteurization process, “you should not get sick,” Gounder added.

Officials previously said that the unprecedented spread of the virus among dairy cattle likely traces to a single spillover event from wild birds, based on an analysis of genetic sequences collected from sick cattle.

Since then, genetic data and investigations suggest the virus has spread to infect cows across at least eight states and a human dairy worker in Texas. Egg farms from Texas and Michigan are also suspected to have been infected by virus that spread from cows, adding to millions of poultry culled because of infections from wild birds.

“Those farms have been in close proximity to affected dairy farms. And so there could be lateral flow from the dairy farms to these poultry operations, to these egg laying operations. This could be such things as transfer of the virus through fomites, such as on clothing or on vehicles,” National Milk Producers Federation chief science officer Jamie Jonker said at recent Swine Health Information Center webinar.

The virus was not initially found in the respiratory tract of most infected cows, officials said, suggesting it is not spreading through the air between cows like other kinds of influenza. Instead, H5N1 HPAI in the current outbreak has been found almost exclusively in raw milk and the cow organs that produce it. Officials think the virus may have spread between cows during the milking process on farms, through surfaces contaminated with infected raw milk. 

However, Watson said that at least one cow headed to slaughter has now been found with signs of the virus in its lung tissue. The cow was condemned by USDA inspectors and did not enter the food supply, Watson said.

Federal scientists have also found a mutation in another sick cow from Kansas that had a genetic change that adapted the flu to spread better in mammals.

“The one sequence shift and the one dairy cow with H5N1 in the lung tissue so far appear to be isolated events. However, the novel movement of H5N1 between wild birds and dairy cows requires further testing,” Watson said. 

Cows mostly have been recovering from the virus without dying, Watson said. That’s in stark contrast to the kind of mass die-offs seen in birds and some other species. However, dairy industry officials have previously said some cows have yet to recover their ability to produce milk, raising concerns of long-term issues for some cattle.

“We need time to develop an understanding to support any future courses of action. So this federal order is critical to increasing the information available for USDA,” said Watson.

H5N1 HPAI virus found in pasteurized milk

While health authorities say they think previous work pasteurizing eggs for HPAI H5N1 and milk for other germs suggests the process will be enough to eradicate the danger from any lingering traces of the virus found in milk, they say studies are also ongoing now to verify that pasteurized milk remains safe.

“A positive PCR test does not necessarily mean that the sample contains an intact infectious pathogen and that additional testing is required to determine whether intact pathogen is still present and if it remains infectious,” Don Prater, head of the FDA’s food safety center, said at the news briefing.

This involves what FDA says is the “gold standard” for checking if the virus that they found is potentially infectious, taking the H5N1 HPAI particles they found and seeing if it will grow in chicken eggs. 

Research backed by the National Institutes of Health has also found H5N1 HPAI fragments in milk. Early testing of those samples suggests the virus in the pasteurized milk was not infectious, trying to grow the virus in cells and chicken eggs.

“While this is welcome news, the effort studied a small number of samples that is not necessarily representative of all retail milk. So to really understand the scope here, we need to wait for the FDA,” said National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo.

Prater said that the samples had come from a national survey of the U.S. milk supply, but declined to share details of where they had been found and what kinds of milk have tested positive. 

“We don’t have information yet to share but it will be coming out very shortly and that’s what I can share at this point,” said Prater.

https://0174873a8e87c9af82dac1e86634f372.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Milk from cows known to be sick with symptoms of the virus is not entering the supply chain, Prater said. But it is possible that the virus could be making it into the supply chain from other sources, Prater said, possibly from cows that are not yet symptomatic or have previously recovered.

FDA has some data that could help investigators trace where the milk with the virus made it into the food supply, Prater said.

“Right now we will be able to look at information that we are collecting as part of this. Our traceability information is good, but it’s not perfect,” said Prater.

Grizzly bears are officially coming back to North Cascades, park service and US Fish & Wildlife announce

Grizzly bears will be translocated from the Rocky Mountains and interior British Columbia to establish a population in the North Cascades.

https://www.king5.com/article/life/animals/grizzly-bear-population-to-be-restored-in-north-cascades/281-a0b2476e-4dc1-4aad-8ac9-082693c962e3

Author: Helen Smith

Published: 8:54 AM PDT April 25, 2024

Updated: 10:14 AM PDT April 25, 2024

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WASHINGTON, USA — Two agencies officially announced Thursday their plans to restore a population of grizzly bears to the North Cascade Mountains. 

The National Park Service (NPS) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife will seek to move three to seven grizzly bears a year over five to 10 years to establish an initial population of 25 grizzly bears. The animals will be translocated from ecosystems in the Rocky Mountains and Interior British Columbia, according to a press release. 

Grizzly bears were native to the North Cascades for thousands of years but disappeared mostly due to hunting by humans. The last confirmed sighting of a grizzly bear in the U.S. portion of the North Cascades Mountains was in 1996. The North Cascades ecosystem is roughly 9,800 square miles, which is larger than the state of New Jersey, and home to some of the most intact wildlands in the contiguous U.S., according to the release. 

The bears served as a key part of the North Cascades ecosystem, distributing native plant seeds and keeping other wildlife populations in balance, according to the NPS. 

“We are going to once again see grizzly bears on the landscape, restoring an important thread in the fabric of the North Cascades,” said Superintendent of the North Cascades National Park Service Complex Don Striker. 

The process to restore the grizzly bear population was the subject of much public input, with 12,000 comments submitted on the NPS’s draft environmental impact statement in 2023. The plans have been unpopular with people who live around the North Cascades National Park, including residents in Newhalem, and farther east into Central Washington. 

There is no set timeline for when the translocation of grizzly bears to the North Cascades ecosystem will begin. The NPS will provide updates to the public as plans develop. 

Tell WY: Ban Use of Snowmobiles to Chase and Kill Wolves

Mexican gray wolf

Take Action: Urge Wyoming to Ban the Use of Snowmobiles and Other Motorized Vehicles to Chase Down and Kill Wolves

A Wyoming hunter has been cited after chasing and injuring a wolf on his snowmobile, taping their mouth shut, bringing them to his home and a bar, before killing them. It’s time to ban the use of snowmobiles and motorized vehicles to chase and kill wolves.

Wolf killing in Wyoming isn’t ethical hunting or necessary “wildlife management” – it’s animal cruelty and should be punished as such. Take action now against this cruel form of hunting.

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  • Governor c/o Wildlife Policy Staff Sara Dirienzo Mark Gordon

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Ban the use of Snowmobiles and Other Vehicles to Chase Down and Kill Wolves

Dear [Decision Maker],

Thank you for acknowledging that cruelty to any wildlife is unacceptable, and denouncing the brutal torture and killing of the young wolf.

I am reaching out to urge you to ban the use of snowmobiles and other motorized vehicles including aircraft, automotive vehicles, trailers, motor-propelled wheeled vehicles, or other vehicles designed for travel over snow for the purposes of chasing down and killing wolves in the state of Wyoming.

Wildlife policies that legalize and liberalize the cruel killing of native predators only breed further vitriol and hatred towards these animals; they don’t accomplish any management goals.

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This cruel event should encourage Wyoming legislators and wildlife advocates to band together and ban the use of snowmobiles and other motorized vehicles to kill wolves in Wyoming and other states.

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[Your Name]
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[Your Email]