Tag: avian flu
Why Do So Many Eggs Come From Iowa?

Why Do So Many Eggs Come From Iowa?

An outbreak of bird flu has forced American farmers to kill millions of egg-laying chickens, 32 million in Iowa alone — hence the rise in egg prices.

But why so many? Because our eggs are now produced by a handful of gigantic farms. When one of their birds gets sick, the farmers have to kill them all.

This concentration of egg production wasn’t always the case. In the 1970s, there were about 10,000 commercial egg companies, according to The Wall Street Journal. Today there are fewer than 200.

Bird flu aside, depending on a few farms, mainly in the Midwest, for most of our eggs doesn’t make much sense. Eggs can be laid anywhere in the country. That includes backyards in Denver, New York, and Des Moines.

So many urbanites have taken up chicken husbandry that cities are setting down strict rules for the activity. Poultry farming in dense neighborhoods is problematic. More on that later.

But every city has farms nearby that could supply eggs. The reason a few industrial farms dominate the business is that bigger is cheaper.

“Our customer base is demanding the lowest cost possible, and that causes us to put 6 million chickens on one farm,” an executive at Rose Acre Farms told the Journal.

Some consumers care greatly about where their eggs, as well as apples, come from. The more local the better.

But fast-food chains and warehouse stores gravitate to the lowest prices. The restaurants don’t necessarily buy eggs as most of us know them. McDonald’s uses eggs in liquid form for many of its dishes (though the Egg McMuffin, the McDonald’s website clearly states, is made with “a freshly cracked, Grade A egg”).

Interesting that the concept of “food miles” — the distance American produce travels before reaching the table — was pioneered at Iowa State University’s Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture. Researchers there found that California onions sold in Des Moines typically journey over 1,700 miles. Produce trucked from outside the state uses between 4 and 17 times more fuel than that grown locally.

And Iowa hardly lacks for farmland.

As drought strikes California’s agricultural kingdom, concerns are rising about its ability to “feed the nation.” Meanwhile, more Americans are wondering why all their carrots must come from there. The water crisis enhances their arguments for local agriculture.

About backyard chicken farming: This is not a job for squeamish city people. Chickens smell, and their coops must be cleaned. Hens reach a point when they can no longer lay eggs. Are urban farmers emotionally equipped to turn a “pet” into Sunday dinner — or to provide retirement facilities for a hen past her prime?

Also, sooner or later, something gruesome is going to happen to one of the chickens. A dog may get at it. Or the chicken comes down ill.

Neighbors may object to the clucking and the odors. They have a point.

The desire to connect more closely with our food sources is a good one. But the idea of raising chickens in small backyards is more romantic than the reality.

In densely packed areas, growing silent lettuce, tomatoes and string beans may be more neighborly than raising living, squawking farm animals. Better to patronize your local egg producer. That would both bring fresher eggs and help boost your local farmer.

Meanwhile, there’s no point in stressing over buying food products from elsewhere in the country, especially those needing special climates (avocados) or wide-open spaces (beef). Without our food distribution system, produce sections up north would be pretty dull in February.

Moderation in all obsessions is the way to go.

Follow Froma Harrop on Twitter @FromaHarrop. She can be reached at fharrop@gmail.com. To find out more about Froma Harrop and read features by other Creators writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Web page at www.creators.com. 

Photo: Curandera Vision via Flickr

Quick & Healthy: Bye Bye Birdies

Quick & Healthy: Bye Bye Birdies

“Quick & Healthy” offers some highlights from the world of health and wellness that you may have missed this week:

  • UCLA researchers have started exploring non-surgical treatments for appendicitis. Dr. David Talan, an emergency medicine specialist, says recent studies in Europe have indicated that antibiotics can cure the disease in “many patients.” A survey of patients who had not had appendicitis found that nearly 50 percent would prefer the non-surgical option, while nearly 75 percent of patients who have had an appendectomy would have preferred taking a pill rather than going under the knife. Who knew?
  • Recent studies have found that depression increases one’s risk for stroke. A four-year study followed 16,000 men and women who had no history of stroke, characterizing them by levels of depression. Those with consistent depressive symptoms were found to have double the risk for stroke, while those few to no symptoms had no elevated risk. The next step, according to researchers, is to determine if treating depression can lower the risk for stroke.
  • Center Fresh Group, one of the nation’s largest egg producers, must dispose of 5.5 million egg-laying hens, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. This is the first time American farmers have confronted such a widespread health crisis among livestock. The strain is thought to have been brought to the Midwest by migratory birds from the West Coast. So far, the bulk of the infection has been in Iowa farms, though North Dakota, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Minnesota have also had high numbers of cases. Officials have descended on infected areas to assist locals with the safe disposal of the birds. The infection is expected to impact a wide swath of food producers, including Nestlé, which uses liquid eggs in its cake mix and ice cream brands. The wholesale price for liquid eggs has already doubled nationwide, hitting $1.23 last Wednesday.
  • A new study in mice finds that a lack of exercise may upset the body’s natural rhythms. Following up on a 2009 study that found activity levels became less regular with age, scientists tracked the effects of exercise in groups of mice divided by age. They found that exercise affected the mice’s activity patterns more than age, influencing their circadian rhythms and creating healthier patterns long term.

Photo: Matito via Flickr

Quick & Healthy: Welcome To The Machine

Quick & Healthy: Welcome To The Machine

“Quick & Healthy” offers some highlights from the world of health and wellness that you may have missed this week:

  • IBM announced that it would be putting its state-of-the-art Watson supercomputer to use in the battle against cancer. The advantage and innovation of Watson, made famous when it bested two human competitors at Jeopardy, is its ability to process mountains of raw data to arrive at specific solutions to particular problems. In this case, it means Watson will analyze reams of genomic data from patients fighting cancer to find the best treatments.
  • An unprecedented outbreak of avian flu is ravaging turkey farms in the American Midwest. The virulent H5N2 virus has spread to poultry farms in 14 states, leading to mass culling and euthanasia of the affected stock.
  • We’ve got smartphones, smartcars, smartwatches — soon you could have smart dishware that can tell you when you’re consuming too many calories. (Americans clearly need someone to tell them.) The SmartPlate is a wi-fi-enabled piece of crockery that scans and weighs the food placed on it — identifying the amount and nutritional value (or lack thereof) of its contents.
  • A new report from the World Health Organization (WHO) finds that only one-fourth of 133 countries surveyed have a comprehensive plan to combat antibiotic-resistant pathogens, otherwise known as “superbugs.” Among the disquieting report’s key findings is that countries are less than diligent at monitoring for these novel strains and that rampant overprescription of antibiotics has continued, despite public warnings that this contributes to emergence of bacteria that cannot be killed with available drugs. A previous WHO report stated that the “post-antibiotic era — in which common infections and minor injuries can kill — is a very real possibility for the 21st century.”

Photo: Clockready via Wikicommons

Bird Flu Found In Iowa; Up To 5.3 million Chickens To Be Destroyed

Bird Flu Found In Iowa; Up To 5.3 million Chickens To Be Destroyed

By Ryan Parker, Los Angeles Times (TNS)

H5N2 avian influenza, or bird flu, has reared its head at a commercial egg-laying facility in northwest Iowa that houses as many as 5.3 million chickens, according to state officials.

All the birds in the Osceola County facility will be euthanized, according to a statement by the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship. The exact number of birds at the facility is unclear, department spokesman Dustin Vande Hoef said, “but it can house as many as 5.3 million.”

State officials said they had quarantined the premises. The birds will be destroyed over the next week, Vande Hoef said.

The bird flu came to light when the mortality rate for the facility’s chickens began to rise and the facility decided to run tests, Vande Hoef said. He did not identify the facility’s operator.

The facility houses nearly 10 percent of the state’s egg-laying chickens when at capacity, officials said.

There have been no reports of people being infected, according to the state’s agriculture department. And officials said they believed the risk to people from the infections in wild birds, backyard flocks, and commercial poultry “to be low.”

It is the second outbreak of bird flu reported in Iowa this month.

Last week, avian influenza was discovered in a flock of 27,000 turkeys in Buena Vista County, the Des Moines Register reported. Those birds have been euthanized, it said.

On Monday, Hormel Foods Corp. said it expected to sell fewer turkeys this year because of bird flu outbreaks in multiple states, including Minnesota, where Hormel is based.

“We are experiencing significant challenges in our turkey supply chain due to the recent HPAI outbreaks in Minnesota and Wisconsin,” Jeffrey M. Ettinger, the company’s president and chief executive, said in a statement.

However, Hormel said it expected the bird flu outbreak occurrences to decline “as the weather improves.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention could not be reached for more information.

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times, Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Photo: Laboratory specialist working on avian influenza at a renovated human health lab. (World Bank/Flickr)