Several thousand cattle quarantined near
Yellowstone
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[December 06, 2014]
By Laura Zuckerman
(Reuters) - Several thousand head of
cattle have been quarantined in Montana after a cow near Yellowstone
National Park tested positive for brucellosis, the livestock disease
much feared by ranchers and also carried by elk and bison, state
livestock officials said on Friday.
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The disruption comes at a crucial moment for the region's beef
producers, who are in the midst of readying the bulk of their herds
for sale at a time of record high prices for the cattle they bring
to auction.
The quarantine will for the time being place off-limits livestock
belonging to the rancher whose cow tested positive - likely infected
by an elk - and neighboring producers whose herds may have been
exposed through intermingling of livestock, officials said.
But the finding will not cost Montana its prized brucellosis-free
status, which allows cows to be shipped across state lines without
vaccination or testing, he said.
Several thousand head in all are affected by the quarantine, a
fraction of the more than 2 million cattle raised throughout
Montana, state veterinarian Dr. Marty Zaluski said.
Exposure to brucellosis, a disease that can cause pregnant cows and
other animals to miscarry their young, is at the center of an
ongoing dispute between ranchers in Montana and wildlife advocates
over management of Yellowstone's famed bison population and vast elk
herds in and around the park.
Many of those animals have been exposed to the disease, first
brought to the region by cattle.
Bison that wander from Yellowstone into neighboring Montana each
winter in a search for food are targeted for hunting or capture and
slaughter to prevent them from transmitting brucellosis to cattle
that graze in the vicinity.
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The program is fiercely opposed by environmental groups and wildlife
activists, who routinely sue to stop the culling.
Under a U.S. Department of Agriculture rule designed for livestock
in the vicinity of Yellowstone, which spans parts of Wyoming,
Montana and Idaho, testing and quarantining of cattle is required to
prevent the spread of brucellosis when it is found, Zaluski said.
Cows in Montana counties just outside Yellowstone have tested
positive for brucellosis just five times during the past eight years
without triggering larger outbreaks or risking the state’s
brucellosis-free classification.
“The infection rate is very low because we identify these cows very
quickly,” Zaluski said.
(Reporting by Laura Zuckerman from Salmon, Idaho; Editing by Steve
Gorman & Kim Coghill)
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