INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — State officials say avian influenza has been detected at a third northern Indiana duck farm.
The Indiana State Board of Animal Health said Monday that laboratory testing of a commercial duck flock in Elkhart County has come back as presumptively positive for the virus.
It says the samples are being verified at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Iowa.
The agency says the duck flock has an estimated 6,500 birds.
The agency also says positive test results have been identified in a bald eagle, a hawk and a redhead duck collect in Indiana.
Bird flu was detected earlier this year at six turkey farms in southern Indiana’s Dubois and Greene counties.
Final activities to close the cases, including compost disposal, virus elimination, environmental sampling for presence of the virus and a fallow period continue, according to the agency.
-
Families hopeful new child welfare laws will save lives, boost transparency
New laws will soon take effect aimed at better protecting children in our state— House Enrolled Acts 1257 and 1036
11 arrested in Shelby County child predator sting, infant rescued
A three-day undercover sting operation targeting online child sex predators resulted in 11 arrests last week in Shelbyville.
Gov. Braun announces $1 billion investment to agriculture and life sciences
Governor Braun announced a $1 billion investment in Indiana's agricultural and life sciences sectors Tuesday, with the goal of creating 100,000 high-wage jobs over the next decade.
Cyberattack on Stryker raises concerns about American data security
A cyberattack targeting U.S.-based medical technology company Stryker — reportedly linked to an Iranian-backed hacking group — is raising new concerns about the safety of Americans' personal data.