News

EFSA’s scientists highlight that key European stop-overs with high-density bird congregations, such as Iceland, Britain, ...
The seasonal migration of wild birds and the importation of certain US products – such as those containing raw milk – could be potential routes for ...
HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins have expressed interest in letting H5N1 outbreaks spread unchecked through U.S. poultry farms. Health experts warn it ...
Australia will ease restrictions on beef imports from the U.S., potentially aiding trade negotiations with U.S. President ...
Australia’s agriculture ministry announced on Thursday that it would relax restrictions on US beef imports. This decision ...
Animal diseases are appearing in places they never were before, driven by shifting climate, trade, and evolving pathogens, says WOAH’s Montserrat Arroyo ...
We catch up with Keith Albright, senior consumer insights manager for the North America team at Cargill, who details how the ...
The 9th meeting of the Empowered Committee for Animal Health (ECAH) was convened today in New Delhi under the aegis of the ...
Charles Purcell, Americas Foodology technical leader at Univar Solutions, talks to us at the ongoing IFT First trade show in Chicago, about the company’s prototypes highlighting protein fortification ...
The fatality rate for H5N1 highly pathogenic avian influenza in humans has historically been high, with more than half of ...
New versions of the H5N1 virus are increasingly adept at spreading. Suggestions to either let it rip in poultry or vaccinate the birds could backfire.
New research uses bird droppings to track avian flu in remote regions, revealing hidden hotspots and potential for early outbreak detection.