Livestock head: Elk may be brucellosis culprit
HELENA, Mont. (AP) The director of the state Livestock Department says preliminary findings are pointing to elk as the possible source of a brucellosis outbreak at a Bridger ranch this spring.
Christian Mackay told the Environmental Quality Council today the possibility isn't definitive and quote "may never be definitive." A spokesman for the U-S Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service wouldn't confirm the possibility.
Larry Cooper says the agency is still investigating.
Brucellosis causes pregnant cows to abort their calves. It was detected at a Bridger ranch in May, and although subsequent testing has turned up negative the state could lose its brucellosis-free status if another case turns up in the next two years.
Mackay says just 19 more cattle will be tested in the coming weeks.
Another 850 cows mostly steers south of Bridger will be tested this fall.
HELENA, Mont. (AP) The director of the state Livestock Department says preliminary findings are pointing to elk as the possible source of a brucellosis outbreak at a Bridger ranch this spring.
Christian Mackay told the Environmental Quality Council today the possibility isn't definitive and quote "may never be definitive." A spokesman for the U-S Department of Agriculture's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service wouldn't confirm the possibility.
Larry Cooper says the agency is still investigating.
Brucellosis causes pregnant cows to abort their calves. It was detected at a Bridger ranch in May, and although subsequent testing has turned up negative the state could lose its brucellosis-free status if another case turns up in the next two years.
Mackay says just 19 more cattle will be tested in the coming weeks.
Another 850 cows mostly steers south of Bridger will be tested this fall.