Two cats that belonged to Michigan dairy workers exposed to bird flu died after being infected with the virus last year.
But the study, whose publication was delayed by a pause in public communications by the agency, leaves key questions ...
Two indoor cats in the same county in Michigan were infected with H5N1 avian flu last May, likely via their owners who worked ...
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is trying to reverse the firing of some employees who were involved in responding to the ...
Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins is expected “in the coming days” to announce a new strategy for fighting the bird flu ...
The Trump administration’s efforts to impose its will on the federal workforce through mass firings, funding freezes and ...
The Agriculture Department is scrambling to rehire several workers it fired as part of President Donald Trump’s broad cuts ...
The study provides growing evidence of the threat it poses even when cats have no direct exposure to sick dairy cows or poultry.
The latest bird flu detections come as the U.S. Department of Agriculture is trying to rehire bird flu experts​ that were fired as part of DOGE cost-cutting efforts.
Following similar deals in countries like the United States and the U.K., Canada is bolstering its stockpile of bird flu ...
Blue was placed under veterinary observation on Jan. 31, but his condition had not yet been diagnosed when he died earlier this month.
Blue, a 21-year-old harbor seal, is believed to have contracted the virus through contact with a wild bird, zoo officials said.