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Canada, Mexico Ban Shipments of Poultry From California
AP ^ | Jan 3, 2003

Posted on 01/03/2003 5:34:19 PM PST by Black Powder

SACRAMENTO (AP) - Canada and Mexico have banned shipments of poultry and poultry products from California because of the outbreak of Exotic Newcastle Disease, the California Farm Bureau said. The disease, which threatens the state's $3 billion poultry industry, is harmless to humans but fatal to birds.

State farm officials said Canada will stop all shipments of poultry and its products from California for 14 days. Mexico, the state's leading export market for poultry, also called for a similar ban.

The California Poultry Federation, which represents about 160 poultry farmers, was lobbying for the bans to be modified to include only six quarantined counties in Southern California.

Agriculture officials ordered more than a million chickens destroyed after finding new cases of the disease. The outbreak was discovered in September in backyard chicken flocks in Los Angeles County.

Meanwhile, Ventura County will join Riverside, San Bernardino, Los Angeles, San Diego and Orange counties with quarantine restrictions after the discovery of an exotic Newcastle infection there, state officials said.

The latest case, confirmed Wednesday, involved a pet bird, not a commercial flock, said Larry Cooper, spokesman for the state Department of Food and Agriculture.

The quarantine bans the transportation of live birds or poultry products, except eggs that have been sanitized, outside the quarantine area.

A statewide outbreak of the disease in the 1970s threatened the entire U.S. poultry and egg supply and led authorities to destroy nearly 12 million chickens. It cost $56 million to eradicate the disease.

California is the nation's third-largest egg producer. More than half the state's 12 million egg-laying hens are in the quarantine zone.

Officials have emphasized that chicken and eggs remain safe to eat, and that the virus does not harm humans even if an infected chicken is consumed. There is no cure for the disease.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Canada; Foreign Affairs; Mexico; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: newcastledisease

1 posted on 01/03/2003 5:34:19 PM PST by Black Powder
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To: Black Powder
Smuggled pet birds, especially Amazon parrots from Latin America, pose a great risk of introducing exotic Newcastle into U.S. poultry flocks. Amazon parrots that are carriers of the disease but do not show symptoms are capable of shedding exotic Newcastle virus for more than 400 days.

Here is the link
APHIS
This stuff happens when you fail to control the borders.
2 posted on 01/03/2003 6:00:51 PM PST by Crusader21stCentury
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To: madfly
Yep.
3 posted on 01/03/2003 6:28:16 PM PST by I_Love_My_Husband
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To: Free the USA; backhoe; Libertarianize the GOP; Carry_Okie; Ernest_at_the_Beach; farmfriend; ...
ping
4 posted on 01/03/2003 10:13:40 PM PST by madfly
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To: Crusader21stCentury
This stuff happens when you fail to control the borders.

Correct (I wrote a whole chapter in a book on that one). You will note that the environmentalists are relatively silent about it. IMO, exotic species are second only to regulatory government as the biggest environmental threat in the nation.

5 posted on 01/03/2003 10:44:41 PM PST by Carry_Okie
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