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Rose Acre Farms, one of the largest egg producers in the country, announced on its Facebook that its Cort Acre Egg Farm in Seymour recently tested positive for highly pathogenic avian influenza ...
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Bird flu confirmed at Indiana egg producer. What to know - MSNIndiana-based egg producer Rose Acre Farms confirmed bird flu its Seymour facility after weekend testing.
Indiana-based egg producer Rose Acre Farms confirmed bird flu at one of its facilities after weekend testing.
Hoosier farmers are on edge as the bird flu—officially the highly pathogenic avian influenza, or HPAI—continues to menace big and small flocks alike three years into this outbreak.
Bird flu has now hit close to home; late last month, birds at Rose Acre Farms in Seymour, Indiana, 40 miles east of Bloomington, tested positive for the bird flu. According to the Indiana State Board ...
The Board of Animal Health has created a ten-kilometer and twenty-kilometer zone around Rose Acre Farms to monitor bird flu after an outbreak led to the death of 2.8 million egg-laying hens.
Rose Acre Farms is the second largest egg producer in the U.S. They are working with the Indiana State Board of Animal Health to handle the bird flu outbreak.
This week, officials at Rose Acre Farms’ Cort Acres facility in Jackson County reported cases of “bird flu” where 2.8 million laying hens are located.
On Saturday, Rose Acre Farms, one of the largest egg producers in the U.S., said it confirmed the presence of bird flu at its Seymour, Indiana, farm.
Restaurants across Kentuckiana are feeling the ripple effects of a bird flu outbreak at the major, southern Indiana egg producer, Cort Acre Farms.
The spread of avian influenza shows no signs of slowing, as outbreaks have been reported nearly every week this year. Rose Acre Farms in Jackson County lost over two and a half million egg layers ...
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