If there's a bright side to the U.S. mad cow scare, it's that it could speed the nation's move to a centralized system that electronically tracks animals as they move from fields to feed lots to food ...
Amid another possible government shutdown, a passage in an omnibus bill, which includes $15 million to electronically track livestock, raises alarms with Republicans. The House on Wednesday passed a ...
Agriculture officials are working to track down herdmates of the Alabama cow that is the nation's third case of mad-cow disease. But unlike Japan, Canada and Europe, the United States still does not ...
It took a week after a Washington cow tested positive for mad cow disease in December for the U.S. Department of Agriculture to announce new safeguards. Tighter controls on the meat supply came first.
As dairy farmers dwindle every year, the demand for high-quality milk remains steadfast, driving a surge in dairy farming.
WASHINGTON - Investigators may never figure out where the Alabama cow with mad cow disease was born and raised, in part because the U.S. lacks a livestock tracking system the Bush administration ...
Tracking a cow's health is important for farmers and raisers who want to make sure that their animals are free from diseases and other conditions. To effectively monitor how cows behave, a group of ...
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