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Manitoba confirms new case of deadly PED virus on pig farm

reuters | Posted onSeptember 21, 2016 in Agriculture News

The Canadian province of Manitoba, a big piglet exporter to the United States, has confirmed its first case in three months of the deadly PED hog virus, amid concerns that dirty trucks may be carrying the virus across the border.  Manitoba's government confirmed on its website the Sept. 14 case of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea on a sow farm.


Farmers Enlist Chickens And Bugs To Battle Against Pests

National Public Radio | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Agriculture News

In an effort to turn away from chemical pesticides, which have the potential to damage the environment, some farmers are looking in a new direction in the age-old struggle against pests. They're warding off intruding insects and noxious weeds with bugs and chickens.


Farm Tragedy by the Numbers

Farm and Dairy | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Agriculture News

With worker fatalities in agriculture running higher than all non-agricultural industries combined among workers younger than 16 years old, there’s no doubt that routine farm safety practices are important.  Our “Farm Tragedy by the Numbers” infographic provides the basis for why farm safety should be taken seriously, not only through National Farm Safety and Health Week, but 52 weeks every year.


FDA seeks comment on antimicrobial use in animal feed

Watt Ag Net | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Food News

Agency requests information on how to establish appropriate durations of use for therapeutic products The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is entering the next phase of its efforts to mitigate antimicrobial resistance by focusing for the first time on medically important antimicrobials (i.e., those important for treating human disease) used in animal feed or water that have at least one therapeutic indication without a defined duration of use.


Natural chickens, natural eggs don't exist

Watt Ag Net | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Food News

In reality, there is nothing “natural” as people imagine. Why do chickens and eggs have to be any different? Neither chickens, nor hens, corn, soybeans, the ground itself are as they were in the idyllic past.Groups and individuals are looking for natural foods, with no processing, no chemicals, no genetic modifications, cage-free eggs, slow growth chickens, organic chickens and a long etcetera.However, humans have always processed foods. Although made with "natural" products, jams, bread or a bowl of rice have all undergone a process.


Responsible use in poultry rather than antibiotic-free

Watt Ag Net | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Food News

Dr. Peter Spring, of the Bern University of Applied Sciences, said striving for responsible antibiotic use may be a better strategy than going 100 percent antibiotic-free.


Even organic farmers sacrifice sustainability

Columbia Missourian | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Agriculture News

I visited a family farm recently. It was small, and local, and certified organic. In theory, it was everything an eco-conscious foodie could want. And yet, it wasn’t. Like every farm family, the couple who runs the farm is constrained by economic factors. Unfortunately, the measures they’ve taken to make their finances work have made their farm less environmentally sustainable. Their biggest expense is labor, so they do everything they can to reduce the amount of labor they need, including employing machines. A lot of machines. Machines that run on fossil fuels.


California governor backs rules on cow, landfill emissions

The Washington Post | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Agriculture News

California will begin regulating greenhouse-gas emissions tied to dairy cows and landfills under legislation signed Monday by Gov. Jerry Brown, escalating state efforts to fight climate change beyond carbon-based gases to include methane and other pollutants.  The law targets a category of gases known as short-lived climate pollutants, which have an outsize effect on global warming despite their relatively short life in the atmosphere. Environmentalists hope that tackling short-lived pollutants now would buy time to develop new and more affordable technology to reduce carbon emissions.


Dr. Bronner’s pledges $660,000 to marijuana legalization efforts in California, four other states

The Cannabist | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Rural News

Dr. Bronner’s, a Vista, Calif.-based natural and organic body care products company known for its hemp-based soaps, has pledged to contribute upward of $660,000 to marijuana legalization campaigns in five states.  Dr. Bronner’s plans to partner with organizations such as New Approach and the Marijuana Policy Project and to make financial contributions to legalization campaigns in Arizona, California, Maine, Massachusetts and Nevada, which arevoting on recreational marijuana measures this November.


Southern governors lift driver rules after gas spill

PennEnergy | Posted onSeptember 20, 2016 in Energy News

The governors of three Southern states are lifting restrictions on the number of hours that truck drivers delivering fuel can work, hoping to prevent shortages in both states after the shutdown of a pipeline that spilled at least 252,000 gallons of gasoline in rural Alabama.  Governors can suspend federal transportation regulations during emergencies.  Colonial Pipeline has said most of the leaked gasoline is contained in a retention pond near the city of Helena and there's no public safety concern. The spill was first detected on Sept.


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