Farms.com Home   News

Pork Producers Advised to Guard Against Entry of High Path Avian Influenza in Swine Barns

Pork producers are being advised take steps to avoid the introduction of High Path Avian Influenza into the swine barn.Since the March multi-state detection of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza Type A (H5N1) in U.S. dairy cows, pork sector stakeholders have been developing strategies to reduce the risk of the pathogen becoming infective to swine.

Swine Health Information Center Executive Director Dr. Megan Niederwerder encourages pork producers take steps to block vectors that could carry the pathogen into the barn.

Quote-Dr. Megan Niederwerder-Swine Health Information Center:

I think looking at your biosecurity practices and protocols along with your veterinarian and thinking about how we can deter wild bird access into swine farms as well as think about other risks.Cleaning up spilled feed, eliminating those bird nesting sites, controlling rodents, removing wild animal habitats from around swine farms, using bird netting to prevent access into swine barns and repairing curtains where needed.

We also have additional questions to be learned, thinking about what's the greatest risk for introduction into the swine industry?When we think about those biosecurity aspects, we think about not only bird netting and reducing the bird nests and bird roosting sites near swine farms and near swine air inlets but also we have to think about is there shared equipment with poultry sites or dairy herds?

Are there operations in which these animals are housed together where the introduction into pigs may be a higher risk?The other aspect after the dairy industry introduction is we that have to think about, if you are utilizing dairy products in your feed source for swine, you certainly want to make sure that those products have been pasteurised prior to use, again due to the potential risk of milk products.

The pasteurization process has proven effective.We just want to makes sure any product fed to pigs is indeed pasteurized.

Dr. Niederwerder notes, in cases where surface water sources are used as drinking water, producers should consider treatment strategies to reduce the risk of that water being a source of virus.Additional information can be accessed at swinehealth.org.

Source : Farmscape.ca

Trending Video

Back On The Fields | Cutting Alfalfa Hay| Crop Talk

Video: Back On The Fields | Cutting Alfalfa Hay| Crop Talk

We are cutting our second-cut alfalfa hay! Our machinery hasn't been repaired, but the weather is clear, so we take our opportunity to get back on the fields making hay. The alfalfa crop was ready to harvest, and any delays would result in poor quality feed for our sheep, so we decided to go ahead and get that mower rolling. We have a little crop talk about how we cut the hay with our John Deere hydrostatic mower, how we lay the hay out flat in rows to help it dry quicker, and how the two different plantings in that hay field have developed at varying rates and densities. We discuss the quality of the alfalfa hay and show how differing percentages of grasses mixed in with the alfalfa make a difference in the volume of the hay harvested. Hay is the primary feed source on our sheep farm. Getting it done just right is imperative for sheep farming, sheep health, and sheep care. Quality feed sets the stage for producing productive and profitable sheep and allows for feeding throughout the winter season when pasture grazing is no longer an option for those farmers raising sheep in cold climates such as Canada. While in the hay field, we also have a look at the adjacent corn crop and marvel at how well it has developed in such a short period of time.