WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2016
Hurricane Matthew’s destruction has led to flooding that has decimated livestock in rural eastern North Carolina, one of the top pork producing regions in the state, Daryl Fears reports for The Washington Post. “Conservationist organizations and government agencies that dispatched surveillance helicopters over Cumberland and Robinson counties on Tuesday reported that waters from swollen rivers and creeks had reached at least a half-dozen poultry houses and possibly some hog houses at animal feed operations.”
Brian Long, a spokesman for the North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, said they were aware of poultry farms being flooded, but had no confirmation of hog losses, Fears writes. Rick Dove, an environmentalist for the Waterkeeper Alliance who claimed to have seen thousands of floating carcasses, estimated the number of dead chickens “is probably in the millions” and “there could be tens of thousands of dead hogs.”
Another concern is animal waste getting into fresh water, Fears writes. “The state doesn’t disclose the amount of waste the animals produce, but some organization estimate it at more than 15 million pounds of manure annually.” (Read more)
Written by Tim Mandell Posted at 10/12/2016 11:06:00 AM