Summary

A new H5N1 bird flu variant has become “endemic in cows,” with cases detected in Nevada and Arizona, raising concerns about human transmission.

Experts warn that without intervention, the outbreak will continue, but Trump has cut CDC staff and halted flu vaccination campaigns.

The virus’s spread coincides with a severe flu season, increasing the risk of mutation.

The administration has also stopped sharing flu data with the WHO and shifted its containment strategy away from culling infected poultry, raising fears of inadequate response.

  • tree_frog@lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    It’s mostly corn.

    Granted, it’s not processed in a way to be fit for human consumption.

    But still, most of it is corn. Some of it is corn cobs and stalks but most of it is kernels.

    Outside of that, other grains are very common. Oats for example.

    So, they are right. Raising plants to feed animals so we can eat the animals is less efficient than raising plants for us to eat. Especially in regards to cattle. Which is one of the most inefficient things in the US food system. The only reason it’s so cheap is because of subsidation, both of the cattle and the corn that’s grown to feed them.

    And countries much larger than our own survive on rice and beans just fine. As queerminest eluded to in her comment.

    As far as local food, I have a co-op. So I buy local vegetables and fruits when I can.

    • NSRXN@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 hours ago

      Raising plants to feed animals so we can eat the animals is less efficient than raising plants for us to eat.

      if that were the situation, you might be right. but since we actually feed livestock mostly crop seconds and byproducts, it’s actually a conservation of resources in a lot of situations, with minimal competition with human food sources

      • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        Where they emit the most methane and still are given supplementary feed. There’s also not enough land to sustain a grazing only production system with the massive demand we have

        We model a nationwide transition [in the US] from grain- to grass-finishing systems using demographics of present-day beef cattle. In order to produce the same quantity of beef as the present-day system, we find that a nationwide shift to exclusively grass-fed beef would require increasing the national cattle herd from 77 to 100 million cattle, an increase of 30%. We also find that the current pastureland grass resource can support only 27% of the current beef supply (27 million cattle), an amount 30% smaller than prior estimates

        […]

        Taken together, an exclusively grass-fed beef cattle herd would raise the United States’ total methane emissions by approximately 8%.

        https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/aad401/pdf

    • NSRXN@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 hours ago

      it’s not mostly kernels. livestock are fed the entire plant, and the kernels are a slim minority of the weight.

      • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        14 minutes ago

        Weight matters not even a little compared to the caloric content. If cows got more calories out of corn stalks than corn kernels, then they wouldn’t even finish growing the corn and would just feed them stalks. The fact you have to grow a corn stalk that weighs hundreds of times more than the kernels doesn’t mean the kernels aren’t what the farmers are after for livestock feed purposes. The stalk just gets tossed in for efficiency’s sake because the cows can also digest it.