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New Fact Sheet Offers Information on Strep Zoo Identification, Control, Clean-up

A fact sheet, issued by the Swine Health Information Center, offers pork producers and veterinarians the latest information on Streptococcus zooepidemicus. Streptococcus zooepidemicus, a common bacteria that in rare cases results in the sudden death of pigs, was identified in Canada in 2019 and has since been found in several U.S. states, including outbreaks in 2019 in Ohio and Tennessee and in January of this year in Indiana.

Dr. Paul Sundberg, the Executive Director of the Swine Health Information Center, says a newly developed fact sheet summarizes the infection, how it's transmitted, how it can be controlled and how it can be cleaned up.

Clip-Dr. Paul Sundberg-Swine Health Information Center:

We wanted to make sure that we had the best information out in front of people that we could provide when they're presented with a Strep zoo isolate. It very well may be that veterinarians and producers could have a case that they send into the diagnostic lab and the lab report comes back as Step zoo and  there'll be a lot of questions about what does this mean, what does this bacteria do, how does it work, what's the pathogenicity, what's the control, what's the opportunity for transmission, all of those things.

We've put them together into a fact sheet similar to what we’ve done for the viruses that's in our viral disease matrix, our viral disease list. We had a panel of bacteriologists review the history and the makeup of Strep zoo and they scored it and inserted it into the bacterial list and then they helped develop a fact sheet about it.

It's probably not something you're going to run to say "wow I need to read about this" but it's there for when you need it. That's really the objective of the fact sheet, to make sure that we've got information about these potentially emerging pathogens in pigs that's available for producers and veterinarians to help understand their epidemiology so we can respond quickly should they be identified.

Source : Farmscape

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Evolution of Beef Cattle Farming

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The Clear Conversations podcast took to the road for a special episode recorded in Nashville during CattleCon, bringing listeners straight into the heart of the cattle industry. Host Tracy Sellers welcomed rancher Steve Wooten of Beatty Canyon Ranch in Colorado for a wide-ranging discussion that blended family history and sustainability, particularly as it relates to the future of beef production.

Sustainability emerged as a central theme of the conversation, a word that Wooten acknowledges can mean very different things depending on who you ask. For him, sustainability starts with the soil. Healthy soil produces healthy grass, which supports efficient cattle capable of producing year after year with minimal external inputs. It’s an approach that equally considers vegetation, animal efficiency, and long-term profitability.

That philosophy aligned naturally with Wooten’s involvement in the U.S. Roundtable for Sustainable Beef, where he served as a representative for the Colorado Cattlemen’s Association. The roundtable brings together the entire beef supply chain—from producers to retailers—along with universities, NGOs, and allied industries. Its goal is not regulation, Wooten emphasized, but collaboration, shared learning, and continuous improvement.