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mc32 6 days ago

That’s how we manage them now. I mean before we had that program, we dealt with the pest/infestation that way and we can in the future too if need be to combat what’s getting through. Obviously neutralizing them down in the isthmus is preferred but we’re seeing them come up from Mexico now. So if you have a minor infestation that’s how you treat it to address whatever gets missed by the sterilization program.

It doesn’t render the cattle or meat from the cattle useless. Obviously if affected cattle are untreated they will succumb to the pest.

tptacek 6 days ago | parent [-]

The whole reason this is newsworthy is that the system we had prior to eradication was not good.

mc32 6 days ago | parent [-]

Yes, obviously; but it’s not the end of the cattle industry as some make it out to be.

To clarify: it was never eradicated. It’s been actively managed and kept at bay. Now it’s punching through some holes.

tptacek 6 days ago | parent [-]

Because we stopped doing the thing that works. Your earlier point, that we can just as easily return to herd management strategies, was wrong.

mc32 6 days ago | parent [-]

What did we stop doing? The sterilization program is ongoing.

There are always periodic outbreaks in Central America and Mexico. The current one started in 2023.

One common vector is illegal cattle trafficking.