Tag Archives: poultry

UK poultry farmers demand government issue housing order over rising Avian flu cases

Poultry farmers in the United Kingdom are calling for their government to issue a nationwide housing order for chickens and captive birds after a bird flu outbreak last month. 

Currently, parts of the U.K., including Norfolk, Suffolk and Essex, already have a housing order for all poultry, which requires owners to keep their birds indoors and follow strict measures to protect their flocks from disease. A nationwide housing order would apply to individuals who own birds on commercial or non-commercial properties. 

The response from chicken and egg producers comes as England deals with 27 outbreaks in September across three counties. Producers specializing in Christmas goose are being hit especially hard by Avian Influenza. 

Christine Middlemiss, the chief veterinary officer of the United Kingdom, said she expects bird flu cases to rise for the foreseeable future due to migration patterns of birds coming back to the country. 

COLORADO REPORTS FIRST HUMAN CASE OF H5 BIRD FLU IN US IN POULTRY WORKER

Bird flu has extended across several counties in the United Kingdom.
(iStock)

Outbreaks have also occurred in Oxford, Staffordshire, Cheshire and Devon, according to The Guardian. Therefore, farmers are demanding the government extend the current housing order to the whole nation.

“The sheer persistence of avian influenza over the past year, coupled with soaring energy and feed costs, has put the whole British poultry sector under huge emotional and financial pressure,” said the National Farmers Union poultry board chair James Mottershead in a statement. 

He added, “Given the recent rise in avian influenza cases and the distress they cause for farming families, the implementation of housing measures in the east of England is a necessary step.”

“The number one priority for poultry farmers has always been the health and welfare of their flock,” Mottershead continued. “That is why the National Farmers Union is now urging the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) to consider expanding the regional housing measures on a national basis to reflect any increase in the levels of risk across the country,” 

ZOOS IN US RESPOND TO BIRD FLU OUTBREAK AS INFECTION RATES MOUNT

The British Poultry Council agreed with Mottershead’s statement, adding that a housing order for all farmed birds was paramount for the “safety of all birds.” 

Bird flu is capable of spreading from person to person, with symptoms ranging from mild to severe, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

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Deadly poultry virus found in Fayette Co. flock, officials say

LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) – A case of avian influenza has been detected in a backyard flock of birds in Fayette County, according to federal and state authorities.

Kentucky State Veterinarian Dr. Katie Flynn said the United States Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) National Veterinary Services Laboratory confirmed the presence of highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza in samples taken from a bird submitted from the premise.

“The Kentucky Department of Agriculture and the Office of the State Veterinarian is working alongside animal health officials at both the federal and state government to contain this incident of avian influenza,” Agriculture Commissioner Ryan Quarles said. “Bird producers across the state would be wise to take the necessary precautions to protect their flocks as the cases of Avian Influenza have begun to pop up again across the country. We encourage everyone to visit kyagr.com/HPAI for additional information and updates as they come. Protecting the health of livestock and poultry in the commonwealth is a top priority of the Kentucky Department of Agriculture.”

The state had two earlier cases of the deadly virus in February when birds from commercial poultry operations in Fulton and Webster counties tested positive for the virus. The sites were quarantined and cleaned while surveillance around the premises was conducted.

Officials say no additional detections of the virus were identified beyond the initial infected premises in those counties. The sites were released from quarantine and declared clear of the virus by May. The most recent case is not linked to the February incidents.

Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) is known to be deadly for domesticated chickens and turkeys.

The Kentucky Department of Agriculture (KDA) began an investigation upon notification from the University of Kentucky Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory of a submitted bird testing positive for Avian Influenza.

“Similar to the actions taken in February, we are working diligently to prevent this virus from spreading to other poultry premises,” Dr. Flynn said. “We have activated our Avian Influenza response plan and are in active communication with state, federal, and industry partners. We encourage interested parties to sign up for significant updates at kyagr.com/HPAI.”

Avian influenza does not present a food safety risk; poultry and eggs are safe to eat when handled and cooked properly. There is no risk to the food supply, but birds and eggs from the infected flocks will not enter the food system.

State officials quarantined the affected premise and established a 10-kilometer surveillance zone around the property to determine if there are any further detections.

The virus is carried by free-flying waterfowl such as ducks, geese, and shorebirds. Domestic birds can be infected when a wild bird enters their premise or droppings land in an area near domestic flocks.

Anyone involved with poultry production from a small backyard to a large commercial producer should review their biosecurity activities to ensure the health of their birds. APHIS has materials about biosecurity, including videos, checklists, and a toolkit available as part of its Defend The Flock program.

In addition to practicing good biosecurity, all bird owners should prevent contact between their birds and wild birds. Kentucky bird owners should report sick birds or unusual bird deaths to state and federal officials, through USDA’s toll-free number at 1-866-536-7593.

Additional information on biosecurity for backyard flocks can be found at http://healthybirds.aphis.usda.gov.

Kentucky’s poultry industry ranks seventh in the nation for broiler production. In 2020, Kentucky’s production from boilers and eggs brought in an economic impact of $856 million.

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FSIS Issues Public Health Alert for Poultry and Meat Products Containing FDA-Regulated Corn Starch That Has Been Recalled Due to Misbranding and Undeclared Allergens

WASHINGTON, August 24, 2022 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) is issuing a public health alert for poultry and meat products containing a Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulated corn starch that has been recalled due to an undeclared allergen, specifically milk. FSIS is issuing this public health alert to ensure that consumers are aware that these products should not be consumed. This situation is currently evolving, which means additional products may be added. Please continue to check back for possible updates.

While this public health alert focuses on chicken and pork tamale products, FSIS believes it is likely that additional meat and poultry products will be affected by the FDA-regulated corn starch. The list of products subject to the public health alert are available here and the labels are available here. The tamales were shipped to warehouse, distributor, and retail locations in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin. However, if other products are added, additional states might be affected.

FSIS and FDA are coordinating on the recalled corn starch and are working together to determine the extent of the distribution of the corn starch to other establishments.

There have been no confirmed reports of adverse reactions due to consumption of these products. Anyone concerned about an illness should contact a health care provider.

FSIS is concerned that some product may be in consumers’ homes. Consumers who have purchased these products are urged not to consume them. These products should be thrown away or returned to the place of purchase.

Consumers with food safety questions can call the toll-free USDA Meat and Poultry Hotline at 888-MPHotline (888-674-6854) or live chat via Ask USDA from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (Eastern Time) Monday through Friday. Consumers can also browse food safety messages at Ask USDA or send a question via email to MPHotline@usda.gov. For consumers that need to report a problem with a meat, poultry, or egg product, the online Electronic Consumer Complaint Monitoring System can be accessed 24 hours a day at https://foodcomplaint.fsis.usda.gov/eCCF/.

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Bird flu’s grisly question: how to kill millions of poultry

OMAHA, Neb. — The spread of a bird flu that is deadly to poultry raises the grisly question of how farms manage to quickly kill and dispose of millions of chickens and turkeys.

It’s a chore that farms across the country are increasingly facing as the number of poultry killed in the past two months has climbed to more than 24 million, with outbreaks reported nearly every day. Some farms have had to kill more than 5 million chickens at a single site with a goal of destroying the birds within 24 hours to limit the spread of the disease and prevent animals from suffering.

“The faster we can get on site and depopulate the birds that remain on site, the better,” Minnesota State Veterinarian Beth Thompson said.

The outbreak is the biggest since 2015, when producers had to kill more than 50 million birds. So far this year, there have been cases in 24 states, with Iowa the hardest hit with about 13 million chickens and turkeys killed. Other states with sizable outbreaks include Minnesota, Wisconsin, South Dakota and Indiana.

Farms faced with the need to kill so many birds turn to recommendations by the American Veterinary Medical Association. Even as it has developed methods to kill the poultry quickly, the association acknowledges its techniques “may not guarantee that the deaths the animals face are painless and distress free.” Veterinarians and U.S. Department of Agriculture officials also typically oversee the process.

One of the preferred methods is to spray water-based firefighting foam over birds as they roam around the ground inside a barn. That foam kills the animals by cutting off their air supply.

When foam won’t work because birds are in cages above the ground or it’s too cold, the USDA recommends sealing up barns and piping carbon dioxide inside, first rendering the birds unconscious and ultimately killing them.

If one those methods won’t work because equipment or workers aren’t available, or when the size of a flock is too large, the association said a last resort is a technique called ventilation shutdown. In that scenario, farmers stop airflow into barns, which raises temperatures to levels at which the animals die. The USDA and the veterinary association recommend that farmers add additional heat or carbon dioxide to barns to speed up the process and limit suffering by the animals.

Mike Stepien, a spokesman for the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, said the techniques are the best options when it’s necessary to quickly kill so many birds.

Not everyone agrees.

Animal welfare groups argue that all these methods for quickly killing birds are inhumane, though they are particularly opposed to ventilation shutdown, which they note can take hours and is akin to leaving a dog in a hot car. Animal rights groups delivered a petition last year signed by 3,577 people involved in caring for animals, including nearly 1,600 veterinarians, that urged the veterinary association to stop recommending ventilation shutdown as an option.

“We have to do better. None of these are acceptable in any way,” said Sara Shields, director of farm animal welfare science at Humane Society International.

Opponents of the standard techniques said firefighting foam uses harmful chemicals and it essentially drowns birds, causing chickens and turkeys to suffer convulsions and cardiac arrest as they die. They say carbon dioxide is painful to inhale and detectible by the birds, prompting them to try to flee the gas.

Karen Davis, of the nonprofit group United Poultry Concerns, urged the veterinary association to stop recommending all of its three main options.

“They’re all ways that I would not choose to die, and I would not choose anybody else to die regardless of what species they belong to,” Davis said.

Shields said there are more humane alternatives, such as using nitrogen gas but those options tend to be more expensive and could have logistical challenges.

Sam Krouse, vice president of Indiana-based MPS Egg Farms, said farmers feel miserable about using any of the options.

“We pour our lives and livelihoods into taking care of those birds, and it’s just devastating when we lose any of those birds,” Krouse said. “Everything that we’re doing every day is focused on keeping the disease out and making sure that we’re keeping our hens as safe as possible.”

Once poultry are dead, farmers must quickly dispose of the birds. They usually don’t want to risk the chance of spreading the virus by transporting the carcasses to landfills, so crews typically pile the birds up into huge rows inside barns and combine them with other materials, such as ground up corn stalks and sawdust to create a compost pile.

After a couple weeks of decomposition, the carcasses are converted into a material that can be spread on cropland to help fertilize crops. In some cases, carcasses are buried in trenches on the farm or incinerated.

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U.S. considers vaccines to protect poultry from deadly bird flu

Chickens feed from a row of feed bins at C&A Farms in Fairmont, North Carolina June 10, 2014. Picture taken June 10, 2014.

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CHICAGO, April 4 (Reuters) – The U.S. Department of Agriculture is looking into vaccines as an option to protect poultry against deadly bird flu, the agency’s chief veterinary officer said as the country faces its worst outbreak since 2015.

Supporters say vaccines could help keep poultry alive, prevent financial losses and control food costs, though shots would be too late to stop the current outbreak that has wiped out 22 million chickens and turkeys in commercial flocks since February.

Previously, the United States has eschewed vaccines, worried that importers will ban U.S. poultry shipments because they cannot distinguish infected birds from vaccinated ones. The United States is the world’s second-largest poultry meat exporter a major egg producer, with shipments reaching $4.2 billion in 2020.

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However, the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service is investigating the potential for a vaccine that could be distinguished from the wild type of virus spread to poultry, Chief Veterinary Officer Rosemary Sifford said in an interview.

“We feel strongly that if we could develop a vaccine like that, that would have less of a trade impact,” Sifford said. Researchers estimate that would take at least nine months to develop, she said.

Bird flu has hit poultry in Europe and Asia in addition to North America, and Sifford said the USDA is working with other countries on options for vaccines. Trading has suffered, as importers like China have blocked imports from more than a dozen U.S. states with outbreaks. read more

Though vaccines could protect poultry, some producers worry they would be cost prohibitive for chickens raised for meat, which only live about five to seven weeks.

Still the International Poultry Council, an industry group representing producers worldwide, is reviewing the possibilities, said Jim Sumner, a council member and president of the USA Poultry & Egg Export Council.

“We recognize that in some extreme cases of severe outbreaks, maybe vaccination needs to be considered as an option,” Sumner said.

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Reporting by Tom Polansek; Editing by David Gregorio

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Another virus is soaring through the nation and it could impact many aspects of your life

FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) – The resurgence of the bird flu has infected birds in at least 25 states and it could impact farmers, hunters and even your dinner options.

North Dakota just confirmed the first bird flu case within a backyard chicken flock in Kidder County but that doesn’t necessarily mean the virus just arrived.

“I’ve been getting reports for the last 10 days that have been seeing snow geese that have been either dead or exhibiting some kind of characteristics of a possible sickness so you have the test results and then you have what hunters are seeing out there on the landscape,” said Doug Leier, biologist at North Dakota Game and Fish department.

“With the migratory birds that carry this virus continuing to make it’s way across our state, we want to make sure that all of our poultry stays healthy,” said Beth Thompson, Minnesota state veterinarian and executive director at Minnesota Board of Animal Health.

Minnesota found five cases of bird flu just this last week, which means poultry producers have had to kill almost 350,000 of their birds to keep the virus from spreading.

Thompson says the federal government has financial protections in place for producers, but they’re not all the virus affects.

“In 2015, I think there was an impact to the grocery store to consumers both here in Minnesota and across the United States, I think that remains to be seen,” said Thompson.

But that hasn’t happened this time yet. There aren’t any known human cases yet either.

“From hunters and domestic poultry producers, it’s taking those proper precautions and remaining vigilant, it’s happened in the past and we’ll see what happens, we don’t know what the future holds,” said Leier.

Copyright 2022 KVLY. All rights reserved.

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Minnesota bans poultry sales, exhibitions for 31 days due to H5N1 outbreak

The Minnesota Board of Animal Health (BAH) is temporarily banning poultry sales and exhibitions amid an outbreak of avian influenza.

BAH officials say the ban — which includes all poultry community sales, swaps, fairs, exhibitions and other events where poultry and susceptible birds are brought together — will run from April 1 through May 1.

Thursday, Gov. Tim Walz also signed an executive order waiving some trucking regulations to aid depopulation efforts and transportation of uninfected animals.

As of Thursday, the state said more than 376,000 birds across five counties — Kandiyohi, Lac Qui Parle, Meeker, Mower and Stearns — were affected by the highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1, which was first found this year in Indiana on Feb. 8 before being detected in Minnesota on March 25.

RELATED: Bird flu returns to Minnesota poultry farms, first confirmed cases reported in the state since 2015

No human illnesses from the virus have been reported and the public remains at low risk, BAH and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention officials say. There also isn’t any food safety concern for consumers.

“Viruses like HPAI need hosts to continue to spread,” State Veterinarian Dr. Beth Thompson said in a statement. “It’s our job to stop the spread of disease. Unfortunately, in this situation we feel one of the best things we can do for the health of all birds in Minnesota is to take a pause on poultry events through May 1.”

BAH officials add authorized sellers under the National Poultry Improvement Plan are still able to directly sell baby poultry in stores or by mail.

The state has started a new HPAI hotline at 1-833-454-0156 for anyone with poultry to ask questions or report sick birds.

The vast majority of cases in Minnesota have been found at commercial turkey locations.

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More than 32,000 turkeys in Johnston County euthanized after positive sample of Avian flu :: WRAL.com

— A poultry farm in Johnston County had to preventively euthanize about 32,000 turkeys after a positive sample within the flock. The United States Department of Agriculture has confirmed flu outbreaks in several groups of animals throughout the country.

The turkeys tested positive for High Path Avian Influenza, first at a diagnostic lab in Raleigh and later in a National Veterinary Services Lab in Ames, Iowa.

A spokesperson for the USDA said the turkeys were depopulated to prevent any spread.

“The main reason for depopulating commercial poultry or turkeys is to try and contain the spread because it can spread quite easily,” said Dr. Tara Harrison, with North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine.

The positive sample was the first case of HPAI in domestic poultry in North Carolina.

“With HPAI in the wild bird population and other cases around the country, commercial operators and backyard flock owners have been on heightened watch for any signs of the virus in their flocks,” said State Veterinarian Mike Martin. “The industry responded quickly to the positive result, depopulating the affected flock of 32,100 and starting the composting process of the birds onsite to guard against additional spread. Under HPAI protocols, we will be actively testing other flocks within the 10 kilometer zone or about 6.2 miles in collaboration with our federal and industry partners.”

The 10-kilometer zone includes Johnston County and parts of Wayne and Sampson counties.

The strain’s presence was found in several flocks throughout the country, including:

  • A non-commercial, mixed-species backyard flock (non-poultry) in Berkshire County, Massachusetts
  • A non-commercial, mixed-species backyard flock (non-poultry) in Johnson County, Wyoming
  • A commercial poultry flock in Johnston County, North Carolina
  • A non-commercial, backyard chicken flock (non-poultry) in Franklin County, Ohio
  • A non-commercial, backyard chicken flock (poultry) in Kidder County, North Dakota

The 10-kilometer zone includes Johnston County and parts of Wayne and Sampson counties.

Earlier this month, wildlife officials said a hawk in Wake County was among four wild birds to have died from a highly dangerous strain of bird flu in North Carolina. The state said since Jan. 16, more than 100 hunter harvested wild birds tested positive for the Avian flu. Among those that died were a snow goose in Hyde County, a redhead duck in Carteret County, a red-shouldered hawk in Wake County, and a bald eagle in Dare County.

“We’ve been on heightened alert for months about thism” said Martin.

This type of HPAI is considered low risk to people according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but is highly contagious to other birds, including commercial and backyard flocks of poultry.

“It’s very contagious in chickens, poultry [and] quail but also raptors can get it,” said Harrison.

The virus is also cont considered a food safety threat and infected birds do not enter the food supply.

“The food is safe there,” said Martin. “It’s not contaminated by this virus.”

However, animal experts suggested poultry prices could be impacted if the virus continues to spread.

“The biggest impact could be if there are a lot of poultry that are affected or a lot of poultry that ultimately die from it. That could cause an impact on cost,” said Harrison.

Harrison suggests that people wash their hands and change shoes to help keep inside bards safe from wild birds.

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570,000 broiler chickens to be destroyed as bird flu hits Nebraska poultry farm | Local Business News

Nebraska has confirmed its first case of the bird flu in a commercial flock of chickens.

The state Department of Agriculture said the highly contagious disease has been found in a flock of 570,000 broiler chickens in Butler County.

Jessica Kolterman, a spokesperson for Lincoln Premium Poultry, confirmed that the flock is on a farm that raises chickens sent for processing at the company’s Costco-affiliated operation in Fremont.


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Bird flu had previously been found in several wild geese and a mixed backyard flock in Merrick County, but its discovery in a commercial poultry operation ups the stakes in Nebraska.

The state Agriculture Department said the farm has been quarantined and all 570,000 birds will be humanely destroyed. It also has set up a 6.2-mile control zone around the farm, and producers within that radius will not be allowed to move poultry products on or off their premises without permission.

Kolterman said she believes there are other Lincoln Premium Poultry operations within that quarantine zone.

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State Veterinarian Roger Dudley said the Butler County farm had increased its safety practices and heightened observational testing amid the nationwide outbreak. It quarantined itself after noticing higher-than-normal mortality among its flock and notified the department.


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“Having a second farm in Nebraska confirmed to have HPAI is unfortunate but not completely unexpected,” said Agriculture Director Steve Wellman. “(The department) will use all the resources at our disposal, in coordination with our federal partners, to manage a quick response.”

Kolterman said Lincoln Premium Poultry, which raises chickens for the Costco processing plant in Fremont, has been operating at the highest level of biosecurity possible. She said the company will take direction from the state Agriculture Department and the U.S. Department of Agriculture on how to euthanize and dispose of the birds and how to move forward at the affected farm.

Bird flu so far has infected nearly 15 million birds in the U.S., the worst outbreak since 2015.

That outbreak seven years ago led to nearly 5 million laying hens being euthanized at six farms in Dixon County. Nationwide, more than 50 million birds were killed in what is considered the worst outbreak on record.

Reach the writer at 402-473-2647 or molberding@journalstar.com.

On Twitter @LincolnBizBuzz.

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Bird flu spreads on U.S. poultry farms

(Reuters) – The U.S. Department of Agriculture reported outbreaks of a highly lethal type of bird flu in commercial flocks in Maryland and South Dakota over the weekend, adding to concerns that wild birds are spreading the disease across the country.

Farmers are ordered to kill their flocks after the disease is detected, and importing countries including Mexico, China and Korea have imposed state-specific import restrictions in response.

The bird flu outbreak is the worst since 2015, when nearly 50 million birds, mostly turkeys and egg-laying chickens in the U.S. Midwest, were killed. It comes at a time when food prices are skyrocketing due to labor shortages, supply-chain problems and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, a key wheat and corn exporter.

The disease is already widespread in Europe and affecting Africa, Asia and Canada. The United States is the world’s largest producer and second-largest exporter of poultry meat, according to the U.S. government.

USDA reported the H5N1 strain in wild birds in the Carolinas earlier this year. The strain can be passed on to humans, though U.S. officials said there is a low risk to people.

Below are other outbreaks reported by USDA to date.

MISSOURI: USDA reported an outbreak of a highly lethal type of bird flu in a commercial flock of chickens being raised for meat in Stoddard County, Missouri, on March 4.

The outbreak was confirmed as the H5N1 strain of avian flu in a flock of about 240,000 broiler chickens in the southeastern Missouri county, the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service said. [L2N2V71W3]

IOWA: Iowa reported a highly lethal form of bird flu in a backyard poultry flock of 42 chickens on March 2, expanding a U.S. outbreak of the disease to the top egg-producing state. In 2015, Iowa was at the center of the biggest-ever U.S. outbreak of avian flu.

DELAWARE: A commercial poultry farm with 1.2 million birds was hit by highly lethal bird flu on Feb. 23, significantly expanding the number of birds impacted in the United States.

KENTUCKY: A flock of about 240,000 chickens owned by Tyson Foods Inc in Kentucky tested positive for a highly lethal form of bird flu, government officials and the company said on Feb. 14.

Testing confirmed a highly lethal form of bird flu in a 53,286-bird commercial turkey flock in Kentucky, the state said on Feb. 16, expanding outbreaks in the U.S. poultry sector.

INDIANA: USDA reported an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian flu in an Indiana turkey flock on Feb. 9. The outbreak infected a flock of 29,015 birds, the nation’s first case in a commercial poultry operation since 2020.

Indiana also reported a case of H5 bird flu at a commercial turkey farm on Feb. 15, impacting a flock of 26,625 turkeys. [L1N2UP1L9]

(Reporting by Christopher Walljasper and Caroline Stauffer in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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