Killer Pig Virus Wipes Out More Than 10 Percent Of US Hogs - Spike in Pork Prices

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_Killer Pig Virus Wipes Out More Than 10 Percent Of Nation's Hogs, Causing Spike In Pork Prices | HuffPost



By Meredith Davis and Theopolis Waters

Killer Pig Virus Wipes Out More Than 10 Percent Of Nation's Hogs, Causing Spike In Pork Prices

CHICAGO, April 27 (Reuters) - John Goihl, a hog nutritionist in Shakopee, Minnesota, knows a farmer in his state who lost 7,500 piglets just after they were born. In Sampson County, North Carolina, 12,000 of Henry Moore's piglets died in three weeks. Some 30,000 piglets perished at John Prestage's Oklahoma operation in the fall of 2013.

The killer stalking U.S. hog farms is known as PEDv, a malady that in less than a year has wiped out more than 10 percent of the nation's pig population and helped send retail pork prices to record highs. The highly contagious Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus is puzzling scientists searching for its origins and its cure and leaving farmers devastated in ways that go beyond financial losses.

"It's a real morale killer in a barn. People have to shovel pigs out instead of nursing them along," Goihl said.

Since June 2013 as many as 7 million pigs have died in the United States due to the virus, said Steve Meyer, president of Iowa-based Paragon Economics and consultant to the National Pork Board said. United States Department of Agriculture data showed the nation's hog herd at about 63 million as of March 1, 2014.

PEDv was first diagnosed in Ohio last May and has spread within a year to 30 states with no reliable cure in sight. U.S. packing plants may produce almost 2 percent less pork in 2014, according to Ken Mathews, USDA agricultural economist.

Last week the USDA responded to calls for more reliable data and classified PEDv as a reportable disease, a step that requires the pork industry to track its spread.

"It's a positive step that I wish they had taken last summer when it became obvious this was spreading rapidly," said Meyer.

Most farmers and researchers believe PEDv is transmitted from pig to pig by contact with pig manure.

"Something like a tablespoon of PEDv infected manure is roughly enough to infect the entire U.S. hog herd," said Rodney "Butch" Baker, swine biosecurity specialist at Iowa State University.

The National Pork Board has spent about $1.7 million researching the virus, which is nearly always fatal in pigs younger than 21 days. With pork prices at an all-time high of $3.83 a pound, the loss of baby pigs cuts into profits for hog farmers.

"If you have four weeks of mortality in a PEDv break, that's pretty devastating to the financial wellbeing of that operation," said Greg Boerboom, a Minnesota hog farmer.

"I think most producers are scared," Boerboom said. "They stay up at night."

PEDv does not pose a risk to human health and is not a food safety issue, the USDA says.

ORIGIN MYSTERY

Months of forensic research so far have turned up no clear evidence of how the disease entered the United States.

The virus is nearly identical to one that infected pigs in China's Anhui province, according to a report published in the American Society of Microbiology journal mBio. Researchers also are exploring whether the widespread use of pig-blood byproducts in hog feed might have introduced the disease.

There have been outbreaks in recent years in Europe, Japan, Mexico and parts of South America, though in milder forms than seen in the U.S. and China.

The disease has taken root in Canada, too, where the pork industry is deeply integrated with U.S. pork production.


LIKE A LAWN MOWER

PEDv thrives in cold, damp environments, and after slowing last summer its spread accelerated during the past winter. In mid-December, there were over 1,500 cases but by mid-April, that had more than tripled to 5,790, according to USDA data.

Altogether, of nearly 15,000 samples tested for PEDv about 32 percent have been positive.

The virus "acts like a lawn mower" on the villi in a pig's intestines, which are the tiny projections that aid digestion, said Tony Forshey, chief of animal health at the Ohio Department of Agriculture. With their villi gone, the piglets cannot absorb nutrients from food or water, contract diarrhea and die from dehydration.

So far, no vaccine has been able to completely protect pigs from the disease. An Iowa company, Harrisvaccines Inc., has made some progress, while pharmaceutical giants Merck Animal Health and Zoetis Inc have joined with universities to begin vaccine development.

"There is no silver bullet for PEDv," said Justin Ellis, marketing manager at Alltech, which developed a feed additive designed to reduce risk of the disease.


STRINGENT MEASURES

The disease is spreading even as farmers and truckers impose stricter cleanliness measures across the so-called Hog Belt, which stretches across most of the U.S. Midwest and Plains States and extends south to North Carolina, the nation's No. 2 hog producer. Iowa ranks first.

"It's a complete lifestyle change," said Iowa State's Baker. "In the past the truckers haven't thought of biosecurity much."

Some hog farmers prohibit outside visitors. Others require workers to change clothes when entering and leaving barns. Truck drivers wipe down the step into their cabs, disinfect their steering wheels and change boots or wear disposable booties before entering farm yards.

The industry wants truck washes to use fresh water instead of recycled, since PEDv can live in room temperature water for up to 13 days, a University of Minnesota study said.

"The only truck I regularly allow on site is the feed truck and last November I told the driver not to get out of the truck," said Bill Tentinger, an Iowa farmer who so far has kept PEDv at bay.

The extra washing, drying and disinfecting can consume at least two hours and cost up to $500 per load, industry sources said.


DEATH TOLLS

Bright yellow signs marked "PED" are popping up outside North Carolina farms warning the virus is present. One-third of North Carolina's 3,000 hog farms have been struck by PEDv since the first diagnosed case there in June 2013, the state says.

So many piglets have died that Tom Butler, a farmer who fattens hogs for market in southeastern Harnett County, is having difficulty finding animals. His herd is down 25 percent to 6,000 pigs, costing him more than $100,000.

"We were spiraling downhill for a while but I think we've leveled off," Butler said. "The industry is learning to cope." (Additional reporting by P.J. Huffstutter in Chicago, Marti Anne Maguire in Sampson County, N.C. and Rod Nickel in Winnipeg; Editing by David Greising and John Pickering)
 
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Horrible. I hope it is a natural thing and not a business of TPTB. In any case the elite take advantage of this, because they will be able to inject the pigs with whatever they want. I wonder, for those who have farms, if they can give to the animals colloidal silver and / or anything else that can fight against deadly viruses?.
 
l apprenti de forgeron said:
Horrible. I hope it is a natural thing and not a business of TPTB. In any case the elite take advantage of this, because they will be able to inject the pigs with whatever they want.

Hmm didn't think about that. Hopefully the organic and pasture raised farmers wouldn't let them do that. Though, they might be desperate. I feel sorry for all of the little piggies dying. They're beautiful creatures. I wonder if it's kind of like a mass die off like with the dolphins and other animals.
 
3D Student said:
l apprenti de forgeron said:
Horrible. I hope it is a natural thing and not a business of TPTB. In any case the elite take advantage of this, because they will be able to inject the pigs with whatever they want.

Hmm didn't think about that. Hopefully the organic and pasture raised farmers wouldn't let them do that. Though, they might be desperate. I feel sorry for all of the little piggies dying. They're beautiful creatures. I wonder if it's kind of like a mass die off like with the dolphins and other animals.

Or another sign of the times, this time regarding the best source of nutrition for humans and wonderful animals? Given the different and distant locations where this is happening, could it be a comet-borne virus too?
 
Chu said:
3D Student said:
l apprenti de forgeron said:
Horrible. I hope it is a natural thing and not a business of TPTB. In any case the elite take advantage of this, because they will be able to inject the pigs with whatever they want.

Hmm didn't think about that. Hopefully the organic and pasture raised farmers wouldn't let them do that. Though, they might be desperate. I feel sorry for all of the little piggies dying. They're beautiful creatures. I wonder if it's kind of like a mass die off like with the dolphins and other animals.

Or another sign of the times, this time regarding the best source of nutrition for humans and wonderful animals? Given the different and distant locations where this is happening, could it be a comet-borne virus too?

I thought about that too, also came to mind that food price surges are coming up from a variety of fronts, whether because of the weather or something else.
 
Navigator said:
Chu said:
3D Student said:
l apprenti de forgeron said:
Horrible. I hope it is a natural thing and not a business of TPTB. In any case the elite take advantage of this, because they will be able to inject the pigs with whatever they want.

Hmm didn't think about that. Hopefully the organic and pasture raised farmers wouldn't let them do that. Though, they might be desperate. I feel sorry for all of the little piggies dying. They're beautiful creatures. I wonder if it's kind of like a mass die off like with the dolphins and other animals.

Or another sign of the times, this time regarding the best source of nutrition for humans and wonderful animals? Given the different and distant locations where this is happening, could it be a comet-borne virus too?

I thought about that too, also came to mind that food price surges are coming up from a variety of fronts, whether because of the weather or something else.
It can be because of the weather and the industry/government take advantage of the situation, is what I think might had happend with the egg crisis in Mexico -according to the country's egg production, Mexico has the highest-per-capita egg consumption on the planet, before the outbreak of avian flu in 2012, the egg has X price, then it came the avian flu, there was a shortage, millions of birds were killed, goverment/industry took "measures" ---IEC delegates analyse the international opportunities and challenges facing our industry – Mexico in particular (Wednesday, 12 September 2012) _https://www.internationalegg.com/corporate/news/details.asp?nid=815, just looking a quick overview related news to mexican poultry industry from this site: _http://www.thepoultrysite.com/poultrynews/vars/country/mx/offset/50 ... lead me to think of certain pattern
 
Chu said:
Or another sign of the times, this time regarding the best source of nutrition for humans and wonderful animals? Given the different and distant locations where this is happening, could it be a comet-borne virus too?

Who knows really, but there is the following from this article:

A team of researchers led by Dr. X.J. Meng, University Distinguished Professor of Molecular Virology, has used virus strains isolated from the ongoing outbreaks in Minnesota and Iowa to trace the likely origin of the emergent porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (PEDV) to a strain from the Anhui province in China. The virus, which causes a high mortality rate in piglets, was first recognized in the United States in May of this year.[...]

The researchers determined not only that the three U.S. strains of the porcine epidemic diarrhea virus are most closely related to the Chinese strains of the virus, but also that the U.S. strains likely diverged two or three years ago following an outbreak of a particularly virulent strain in China. [...]

According to the study, the U.S. strains of the virus share 99.5 percent of their genetic code with their Chinese counterpart. Allan Dickerman, a co-author of the paper and research assistant professor at the Virginia Bioinformatics Institute, performed the molecular clock analysis to determine that the divergence of the U.S. and Chinese virus strains coincides with a porcine epidemic diarrhea virus outbreak in China back in December of 2010. Meng said it is unclear whether the U.S. strains of the virus diverged in China or in the United States.

China, no less, eh? Guess, if it would be Russia, they would be screaming "bioterrorism" by now. ;)

But there is also this bit:

Researchers have found no evidence that the virus can spread to humans or pose a threat to food safety. They did, however, come across additional evidence that the U.S. strains share several genetic features with a bat coronavirus - findings which point to an evolutionary origin from bats and the potential for cross-species transmission.

Interesting how bats appear to be reservoirs of so many viruses, including Ebola. As for the disease "jumping" species, there is this research that indicates that some sort of extraordinary event (of a cosmic nature, perhaps?) may introduce a new variant and allow the virus to jump species.

A new study reconstructing the evolutionary tree of flu viruses challenges conventional wisdom and solves some of the mysteries surrounding flu outbreaks of historical significance. [...]

The new research is likely to change how scientists and health experts look at the history of influenza virus, how it has changed genetically over time and how it has jumped between different host species.

The research team, which included UA graduate student Guan-Zhu Han and Andrew Rambaut, a professor from the University of Edinburgh who is also affiliated with the U.S. National Institutes of Health, found a strong signature in the data suggesting that something revolutionary happened to avian influenza virus, with the majority of its genetic diversity being replaced by some new variant in a selective sweep in an extremely synchronous event.

Worobey said the timing is provocative because of the correlation of that sudden shift in the flu virus' evolution with historical events in the late nineteenth century. [...]

"Interestingly, a previous research paper analyzing old newspaper records reported that in the days following the horse flu outbreak, there were repeated outbreaks described at the time as influenza killing chickens and other domestic birds," Worobey said. "That's another unexpected link in the history, and the there is a possibility that the two might be connected, given what we see in our trees."[...]

With regard to humans, the research sheds light on a longstanding mystery. Ever since the influenza pandemic of 1918, it has not been possible to narrow down even to a hemisphere the geographic origins of any of the genes of the pandemic virus.

"Our study changes that," Worobey said. "It is now clear that most of its genome jumped from birds very close to 1918 in the Western Hemisphere, and there is a suggestion that it was North America in particular."
 
mabar said:
Navigator said:
Chu said:
3D Student said:
l apprenti de forgeron said:
Horrible. I hope it is a natural thing and not a business of TPTB. In any case the elite take advantage of this, because they will be able to inject the pigs with whatever they want.

Hmm didn't think about that. Hopefully the organic and pasture raised farmers wouldn't let them do that. Though, they might be desperate. I feel sorry for all of the little piggies dying. They're beautiful creatures. I wonder if it's kind of like a mass die off like with the dolphins and other animals.

Or another sign of the times, this time regarding the best source of nutrition for humans and wonderful animals? Given the different and distant locations where this is happening, could it be a comet-borne virus too?

I thought about that too, also came to mind that food price surges are coming up from a variety of fronts, whether because of the weather or something else.
It can be because of the weather and the industry/government take advantage of the situation, is what I think might had happend with the egg crisis in Mexico -according to the country's egg production, Mexico has the highest-per-capita egg consumption on the planet, before the outbreak of avian flu in 2012, the egg has X price, then it came the avian flu, there was a shortage, millions of birds were killed, goverment/industry took "measures" ---IEC delegates analyse the international opportunities and challenges facing our industry – Mexico in particular (Wednesday, 12 September 2012) _https://www.internationalegg.com/corporate/news/details.asp?nid=815, just looking a quick overview related news to mexican poultry industry from this site: _http://www.thepoultrysite.com/poultrynews/vars/country/mx/offset/50 ... lead me to think of certain pattern

Not to mention the "lemon crisis" that hit about a month or so ago, I was told it was because the bad weather in US prompted a shortage in the country which exports huge amounts there.
 
Just an interesting, but disturbing observation. As it turns out, US is not the only place, where pork prices have spiked. Not long ago I heard on the news about at least a 15% spike in pork prices in Russia, due to the highly contagious swine disease - pig plague/classic swine fever that was probably brought, as they say, from Europe. Also, last year, there was a suspected outbreak of African swine fever (another extremely contagious disease) in Belarus, that led to a massive pig slaughter. I heard many horror stories about mass graves from people who saw the slaughter process. Locals tried to hide their pigs, etc.

Out pathology professor (the only veterinary pathology proffesor in Belarus), btw, says that there was no African fever, but now no one would admit that obviously, since it would mean a sure death sentence after all the damage to the industry. Other teachers speak about foreign provocation, etc. In any case, it took a year, but now the prices for pork have seriously spiked. Yesterday I bought a pig foreshank for a broth, and saw that the prices have jumped up 35% just within couple of weeks! Also, don't know how it is in other Belarus cities, but recently we've been having a serious shortage of salo (salted pork fat), except for the markets and private owners.
 
It's interesting situation in Serbia. EU forbid importing of pork from Serbia because we are vaccinating our pigs against the swine plague, which is forbidden in EU. And Russia forbid importing of pork from EU because swine plague appeared in Poland and Latvia, but allows pork from Serbia. So now Serbia is only European exporter of pork to Russia (I don't know about Belarus), which caught us by surprise because we stopped producing pigs when our market became flooded by cheap pork from EU. Some producers tried to "solve" that problem by repackaging pork from EU and sell it to Russia as Serbian pork :rolleyes:, which Russians found out and gave us a "yellow card" a couple of days ago.

So now we have this enormous demand and not enough pigs. :/ :)
 
Persej said:
It's interesting situation in Serbia. EU forbid importing of pork from Serbia because we are vaccinating our pigs against the swine plague, which is forbidden in EU.

Interesting. Do you know why?

Persej said:
And Russia forbid importing of pork from EU because swine plague appeared in Poland and Latvia, but allows pork from Serbia. So now Serbia is only European exporter of pork to Russia (I don't know about Belarus),

Yep, Belarus is another source, and Ukraine was too. That's why the outbreak of the African swine fever (either real or not) had such an enormous impact on the agricultural sector. Russia is the main buyer of meat, milk products, etc. here.

Persej said:
which caught us by surprise because we stopped producing pigs when our market became flooded by cheap pork from EU. Some producers tried to "solve" that problem by repackaging pork from EU and sell it to Russia as Serbian pork :rolleyes:, which Russians found out and gave us a "yellow card" a couple of days ago.

So now we have this enormous demand and not enough pigs. :/ :)

Again, very interesting. It could be actually a good opportunity for those who live in rural areas, and especially for those who live or lived in areas devastated by the floods. Don't know how it works in Serbia, but here local farmers can sell their produce to the big cattle/pig/dairy complexes, and then they resell it to Russia. But then, maybe in Serbia's situation, why would farmers spend resources raising pigs to sell, if they could use them to feed their families. Not to mention the whole idea of sending your animals to the complex (i.e concentration camps) not being ideal at all.

But it seems that Russian and Belarus do try to use the momentum and expend economical ties with Serbia. Apparently, Lukashenko was not long ago in Serbia and signed some agreements.
 
I have a neighbor with quite a few free range pigs. They breed naturally and he does not inject them with anything so i am lucky that i can get weiner oigs cheap. This way i can get them in the spring and feed them mainly grass etc and the food being virtually free can butcher them in the fall so that no matter how big they get i feel it would be worth it. The only thing i will do differently is to castrate them while they are young. I have two males that i kept through the winter but they werent castrated. I suppose i will just have to make sure i cook the meat thoroughly outside to get the raint smell out as i dont think i will attempt castration at this point. The biggest problem i have is that i have grown too close to them now.
 
Interesting. Do you know why?

I cannot find anything more about that. Bosnia and Croatia were also banned previous years because of that. It's general policy in EU to just kill infected pigs and prohibit vaccination. :/
But in the same time has no problem in vaccinating humans. :rolleyes:

Yep, Belarus is another source, and Ukraine was too.

Russia is such a big country that entire Eastern Europe cannot feed them. :)

That's why the outbreak of the African swine fever (either real or not) had such an enormous impact on the agricultural sector. Russia is the main buyer of meat, milk products, etc. here.

I see, that is a big problem for you.

Again, very interesting. It could be actually a good opportunity for those who live in rural areas, and especially for those who live or lived in areas devastated by the floods. Don't know how it works in Serbia, but here local farmers can sell their produce to the big cattle/pig/dairy complexes, and then they resell it to Russia. But then, maybe in Serbia's situation, why would farmers spend resources raising pigs to sell, if they could use them to feed their families. Not to mention the whole idea of sending your animals to the complex (i.e concentration camps) not being ideal at all.

In Serbia things now work like this: we produce corn and sell it to EU. EU feed their pigs with that corn and then sell the pigs to us. :rolleyes:
We will see how will things progress from now.

But it seems that Russian and Belarus do try to use the momentum and expend economical ties with Serbia. Apparently, Lukashenko was not long ago in Serbia and signed some agreements.

Yes, Lavrov too, shortly after him. But we don't know what exactly they signed. Lukashenko said that he wants to create some mutual company with us, but no specifics were given.

But then Tony Blair also appeared yesterday out of the blue to "give us his support in our path to EU"! :shock:

And in July our PM is going to Moscow. Very busy summer for us, it seems.
 
[quote author=Persej]

I cannot find anything more about that. Bosnia and Croatia were also banned previous years because of that. It's general policy in EU to just kill infected pigs and prohibit vaccination. :/
But in the same time has no problem in vaccinating humans. :rolleyes:

[/quote]

As I have understood it, if the animal is already infected it is late for vaccination and it must be killed. The vaccination must be preventive. I really don't know why they don't do it in the EU, probably because of economic monopole, because in that way they have excuse to kill the whole stock if they want to. If the animal is vaccinated the danger of the classical swine plague is minimal, and the impact on the pigs health is minimal. There was initiative to stop the vaccination in Serbia under the previous (EU paid) government too, but fortunately that stopped.

As far as I understood it, EU doesn't want Serbian pigs because they are vaccinated and because of the meat to fat ratio. EU wants at least 61% of the meat (against the fat and other tissue) in the French cut (for example the sort called "Danish" have even 70% of the meat) and the average in Serbia is 48% meat for individual producers and some 55% to 58% for bigger farms. (BTW I tried that imported "Danish" and its crappy in taste and texture. Very dry.)

The problem for the producers is that domestic people likes fatty meat not dry, so the farms usually are producing for export. Also people in the villages (which is almost the half of the population, plus some 20-25% of the urban population which are more or less dependent for food on their relatives from the village. Serbia is rural country) are using fat for cooking, and you cant have fat from lean pigs.

Source:
_http://poljoinfo.com/forum.php



[quote author=Persej]In Serbia things now work like this: we produce corn and sell it to EU. EU feed their pigs with that corn and then sell the pigs to us. :rolleyes:
We will see how will things progress from now.
[/quote]

True, but that "EU" pigs are mostly from Croatia and Hungary (not so different than Serbian :) ), and the imported percentage still is not high overall. Actually the pork price went down these days and they say that it will go further down some 5-8% in the future days. As I have understood it because of the good corn harvest last year. If you are buying just couple of kilos in the stores it would costs you 4 - 6 euros for a kilo, but many people buys it from the village (relatives or producers they know personally) and the cost is around 2 euro for a kilo. The fat in the stores are also around 2 euros for the kilo. Its only that you must buy the whole pig, which goes from 50-60 kilos and up (but if you put it in a freezer, it is much cheaper on the end, then buying in the store. Some 80 kilos are lasting for maybe 4 months, at least in my house with three people. Plus, you got plenty of fat.)

_http://www.kvantas.rs/cene
_http://www.makroekonomija.org/0-miroslav-zdravkovic/u-aprilu-uvoz-zivih-svinja-ispred-uvoza-lap-topova/



[quote author=Keit]
Again, very interesting. It could be actually a good opportunity for those who live in rural areas, and especially for those who live or lived in areas devastated by the floods. Don't know how it works in Serbia, but here local farmers can sell their produce to the big cattle/pig/dairy complexes, and then they resell it to Russia. But then, maybe in Serbia's situation, why would farmers spend resources raising pigs to sell, if they could use them to feed their families. Not to mention the whole idea of sending your animals to the complex (i.e concentration camps) not being ideal at all. [/quote]

The situation for exporting in Rusia is the same in Serbia. The raising pigs are very lucrative, because they can eat almost anything and don't need some special spaces to grow (plus, average Serbian farmer is very lazy, and don't want some more sophisticated animal :lol: )

It is not the problem for farmers to raise pigs for family and for the sell. I know how my relatives are doing it (and most of the people in their village). They are raising some 3-4 at once (they eat some 2-3 a year) for themselves, the pigs are eating the best food and usually are free range (having some space in the yard for themselves, not in the boxes). And if there is opportunity to earn something they have more of them, but are eating cheaper food and don't go out so often.
 
davey72 said:
I have a neighbor with quite a few free range pigs. They breed naturally and he does not inject them with anything so i am lucky that i can get weiner oigs cheap. This way i can get them in the spring and feed them mainly grass etc and the food being virtually free can butcher them in the fall so that no matter how big they get i feel it would be worth it. The only thing i will do differently is to castrate them while they are young. I have two males that i kept through the winter but they werent castrated. I suppose i will just have to make sure i cook the meat thoroughly outside to get the raint smell out as i dont think i will attempt castration at this point. The biggest problem i have is that i have grown too close to them now.

In my experience meat from uncastrated hogs are not so bad, but the fat is awful, really inedible. But, they say that also depends on the pig's sort.
 
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