Screw worm
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Screw worm It has reached Texas. First cases since the 1960s. Hopefully can be contained but an outbreak would devastate beef and other livestock and animals. Last year, a US funded program in Central America was shut down with the downfall of USAID that effectively monitored and shut down the flies from moving northward for decades. Ever since, flies have been tracked moving northward.
LivinLife reacted Replies:
Trump and Maga learning in real time what the concept of "prevention" is.
Smart people think ahead. Not so smart people learn the hard way.
Smart people think ahead. Not so smart people learn the hard way.
The outbreak was already underway well before the major 2025 USAID controversy.
* New World screwworm cases surged in Panama in 2023, jumping from a few dozen cases annually to thousands.
* The pest spread into Costa Rica in 2023 and into Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and other Central American countries during 2024.
* Mexico officially notified the U.S. of a screwworm detection in Chiapas on November 22, 2024. What the U.S. was doing at that time Far from shutting down the response, the USDA announced $165 million in emergency funding in December 2024 specifically to strengthen surveillance, checkpoints, sterile-fly releases, and efforts to rebuild the biological barrier in Central America. So is it accurate to blame USAID cuts for the outbreak? Based on the timeline, no, not as the primary cause. The screwworm had already: * Re-emerged in the barrier zone,
* Spread through multiple Central American countries,
* Reached Mexico by late 2024, before the 2025 reductions that people associate with USAID.
* New World screwworm cases surged in Panama in 2023, jumping from a few dozen cases annually to thousands.
* The pest spread into Costa Rica in 2023 and into Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and other Central American countries during 2024.
* Mexico officially notified the U.S. of a screwworm detection in Chiapas on November 22, 2024.
* Spread through multiple Central American countries,
* Reached Mexico by late 2024,
The outbreak was already underway well before the major 2025 USAID controversy. * New World screwworm cases surged in Panama in 2023, jumping from a few dozen cases annually to thousands. * The pest spread into Costa Rica in 2023 and into Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and other Central American countries during 2024. * Mexico officially notified the U.S. of a screwworm detection in Chiapas on November 22, 2024. What the U.S. was doing at that time Far from shutting down the response, the USDA announced $165 million in emergency funding in December 2024 specifically to strengthen surveillance, checkpoints, sterile-fly releases, and efforts to rebuild the biological barrier in Central America. So is it accurate to blame USAID cuts for the outbreak? Based on the timeline, no, not as the primary cause. The screwworm had already: * Re-emerged in the barrier zone, * Spread through multiple Central American countries, * Reached Mexico by late 2024, before the 2025 reductions that people associate with USAID. #msg2185393
The return of screwworm comes after the Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency, launched by the Trump administration, last year cut funding for a project dedicated to monitoring and containing New World screwworm in Central America. The funding was axed days before the U.S. ended a temporary suspension of cattle imports from Mexico, meaning livestock was allowed to cross the border without any of the monitoring previously funded by the U.S. Agency of International Development (USAID). Agriculture officials and cattle industry leaders raised alarm about the cuts at the time and, for the last several months, pleaded with the government to step in as they monitored screwworm infections moving north through Mexico-but they were ignored, Texas Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller told NBC News. Crucial Quote
"Instead of using every available tool, USDA moved too slowly and relied solely on a partial solution that takes years to fully implement," Miller said, adding a plea for President Donald Trump to "throw every available federal resource at this threat before it becomes a full-blown agricultural disaster." What Is Screwworm?
New World screwworm is a fly that lays its eggs in open wounds and body openings of warm-blooded animals. Infestations start when a female fly lays eggs on open wounds-wounds as small as a tick bite can attract a female fly to lay her eggs-or other parts of the body in live animals. Eggs hatch into maggots that feed on the living flesh for about 7 days before the larvae drop to the ground, burrow into the soil, and emerge as adult screwworm flies-starting the cycle again. Most infestations occur in animals, but they can occur in people. The most recent human case in the U.S. was reported in Maryland last year in a traveler who'd returned from El Salvador. The person recovered. Key Background
The United States eradicated screwworm in the 1960s through a massive sterile fly program, but outbreaks in Mexico and Central America have raised concerns about the parasite moving north again. The eradication was the result of multiple sterile fly programs across the south that cost roughly $42 million in the mid 1960s, the equivalent of about $452 million today. Despite the programs' success, there have been stand-alone instances of screwworm since, including an isolated outbreak in Texas in 1976 that cost ranches an estimated $452 per head of cattle in today's dollars, totaling $732 million. Those losses came from cattle death, weight loss and hide damage and the cost of surveillance and treatment. Evidence suggests screwworm outbreaks of the past did drive the price of beef higher, though not necessarily in a dramatic nationwide surge, because ranchers in the 1950s and 60s were working in a much stronger industry with higher herd numbers.The U.S. cattle herd had dropped to 86.2 million head of cattle and calves on U.S. farms as of Jan. 1, the lowest number of cattle in America since 1951. In May, the USDA said it predicts beef production will decline by 0.9 percent to 25.310 billion pounds in 2027 and said cattle prices are "projected to reach new highs as supplies remain limited." The average price of ground beef has risen from $3.95 in December of 2020 to $6.89 in April, according to the Federal Reserve. Big Number
$1.8 billion. That's how much economic damage could be caused by another outbreak on the scale of the Texas incident in 1976, according to USDA estimates. What To Watch For
How the officials try to contain the spread. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has barred livestock that originated in or passed through Texas within 21 days from crossing the border, CNBC reported, and Florida separately enacted emergency rules restricting warm-blooded animal imports from infested zones, according to CBS News. The USDA is spending $750 million on a new Texas facility capable of producing roughly 300 million sterile screwworms per week, but it won't be operational until at least 2027, per NBC News. Officials from Texas and the USDA are taking steps to "contain and eradicate" screwworm, the agency said, including implementing cattle quarantines, movement controls and surveillance within a roughly 12 mile area of the infected calf; trapping flies along the border; and releasing millions of sterile male New World screwworm flies in the region. There are 75 personnel actively responding on the ground to the Texas screwworm outbreak, with hundreds more providing laboratory, logistics and air operations support nationwide, according to the USD Credit forbes
"Instead of using every available tool, USDA moved too slowly and relied solely on a partial solution that takes years to fully implement," Miller said, adding a plea for President Donald Trump to "throw every available federal resource at this threat before it becomes a full-blown agricultural disaster."
New World screwworm is a fly that lays its eggs in open wounds and body openings of warm-blooded animals. Infestations start when a female fly lays eggs on open wounds-wounds as small as a tick bite can attract a female fly to lay her eggs-or other parts of the body in live animals. Eggs hatch into maggots that feed on the living flesh for about 7 days before the larvae drop to the ground, burrow into the soil, and emerge as adult screwworm flies-starting the cycle again. Most infestations occur in animals, but they can occur in people. The most recent human case in the U.S. was reported in Maryland last year in a traveler who'd returned from El Salvador. The person recovered.
The United States eradicated screwworm in the 1960s through a massive sterile fly program, but outbreaks in Mexico and Central America have raised concerns about the parasite moving north again. The eradication was the result of multiple sterile fly programs across the south that cost roughly $42 million in the mid 1960s, the equivalent of about $452 million today. Despite the programs' success, there have been stand-alone instances of screwworm since, including an isolated outbreak in Texas in 1976 that cost ranches an estimated $452 per head of cattle in today's dollars, totaling $732 million. Those losses came from cattle death, weight loss and hide damage and the cost of surveillance and treatment. Evidence suggests screwworm outbreaks of the past did drive the price of beef higher, though not necessarily in a dramatic nationwide surge, because ranchers in the 1950s and 60s were working in a much stronger industry with higher herd numbers.The U.S. cattle herd had dropped to 86.2 million head of cattle and calves on U.S. farms as of Jan. 1, the lowest number of cattle in America since 1951. In May, the USDA said it predicts beef production will decline by 0.9 percent to 25.310 billion pounds in 2027 and said cattle prices are "projected to reach new highs as supplies remain limited." The average price of ground beef has risen from $3.95 in December of 2020 to $6.89 in April, according to the Federal Reserve.
$1.8 billion. That's how much economic damage could be caused by another outbreak on the scale of the Texas incident in 1976, according to USDA estimates.
How the officials try to contain the spread. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency has barred livestock that originated in or passed through Texas within 21 days from crossing the border, CNBC reported, and Florida separately enacted emergency rules restricting warm-blooded animal imports from infested zones, according to CBS News. The USDA is spending $750 million on a new Texas facility capable of producing roughly 300 million sterile screwworms per week, but it won't be operational until at least 2027, per NBC News. Officials from Texas and the USDA are taking steps to "contain and eradicate" screwworm, the agency said, including implementing cattle quarantines, movement controls and surveillance within a roughly 12 mile area of the infected calf; trapping flies along the border; and releasing millions of sterile male New World screwworm flies in the region. There are 75 personnel actively responding on the ground to the Texas screwworm outbreak, with hundreds more providing laboratory, logistics and air operations support nationwide, according to the USD
The outbreak was already underway well before the major 2025 USAID controversy. * New World screwworm cases surged in Panama in 2023, jumping from a few dozen cases annually to thousands. * The pest spread into Costa Rica in 2023 and into Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, and other Central American countries during 2024. * Mexico officially notified the U.S. of a screwworm detection in Chiapas on November 22, 2024. What the U.S. was doing at that time Far from shutting down the response, the USDA announced $165 million in emergency funding in December 2024 specifically to strengthen surveillance, checkpoints, sterile-fly releases, and efforts to rebuild the biological barrier in Central America. So is it accurate to blame USAID cuts for the outbreak? Based on the timeline, no, not as the primary cause. The screwworm had already: * Re-emerged in the barrier zone, * Spread through multiple Central American countries, * Reached Mexico by late 2024, before the 2025 reductions that people associate with USAID. #msg2185393
The return of screwworm comes after the Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency, launched by the Trump administration, last year cut funding for a project dedicated to monitoring and containing New World screwworm in Central America. #msg2185515
" Not true. The recent return of the New World screwworm in Texas is linked to its movement from Mexico and Central America, not to funding cuts by any specific administration.
USDA PBS
Return of New World Screwworm
Funding Cuts and Their Impact
The claim that the return of the New World screwworm in Texas is due to funding cuts from the Trump administration is not true. The recent resurgence of this pest is primarily linked to its movement from Mexico and Central America, rather than any specific funding decisions.
Background on New World Screwworm
The New World screwworm is a parasitic fly that poses a significant threat to livestock.
It was effectively eradicated from the U.S. by the 1990s through extensive monitoring and control efforts.
Recent Developments
The USDA has been actively involved in monitoring and controlling the screwworm population, especially after it was detected in Mexico.
Emergency funding was allocated to boost sterile fly production to curb its spread, indicating ongoing efforts to manage the pest.
Conclusion
While there were cuts to various foreign aid programs during the Trump administration, including some related to animal disease monitoring, the resurgence of the New World screwworm is not directly attributed to these funding changes. The pest's return is more closely associated with its natural migration patterns from neighboring regions.
agri-pulse.com
grist.org"
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