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Thanksgiving holiday renews focus on bird flu, rising costs - Iowa Capital Dispatch

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Fresh turkeys are more expensive and smaller than usual leading into the Thanksgiving holiday, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

That’s due, in part, to the deadly and highly transmissible avian influenza that has wracked turkey producers this year. The virus, which is transmitted by wild, migrating birds, has led to the deaths of about 8 million U.S. turkeys this year.

“I don’t think you’re going to have to worry about whether or not you can carve your turkey on Thanksgiving — it’s going to be there,” U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack said early this month. “Maybe smaller, but it’s going to be there.”

It takes about four months for a turkey to grow to 20 pounds, which makes a Thanksgiving meal for about a dozen people.

It was about three months ago that the deadly bird flu reemerged in Minnesota’s commercial turkey farms, and since then it has infected 19 flocks with more than 900,000 total turkeys, according to USDA data. Minnesota is the country’s leading turkey producer.

The price per pound for a fresh turkey for Thanksgiving is about 22% higher than it was a year ago, the USDA reported late last week. Frozen turkeys are about 8% more expensive. Food prices as a whole have been averaging about 11% higher than a year ago.

No turkey flocks have been infected by the avian influenza this fall in Iowa, which has had the largest bird losses of any state this year. About 15.5 million Iowa birds have been culled because of virus outbreaks, and egg-laying chickens account for most of them. Turkeys totaled about 374,000.

There have been four detections of the virus in domestic commercial and backyard flocks in Iowa in October and November, totaling more than 2.1 million birds. Most of Iowa’s losses stemmed from earlier in the year during the spring bird migration.

On Nov. 10, the Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship issued an order canceling live bird shows and the sale of birds at livestock auction markets, swap meets and others. The order was set to expire after 30 days unless there is another virus detection, in which case it will expire 30 days after the detection.

Gov. Kim Reynolds pardoned two turkeys from her desk for this Thanksgiving. (Screenshot of a recorded pardoning ceremony)

In light of the ongoing threat, Gov. Kim Reynolds held her annual turkey pardoning on Tuesday from afar: She pardoned two male turkeys — Stars and Stripes of an Ellsworth farm — in a ceremony that was recorded at her office desk.

“With a statewide order currently in place to protect flocks from the threat of avian influenza, we’re honoring the tradition a little bit differently this year,” she said.

The annual event is meant to highlight turkey production in the state. Reynolds said there are about 130 turkey farms that produce 12 million of the birds annually.

The most-recent bird flu detection at a commercial turkey facility was Monday in South Dakota, where 35,000 birds were affected.

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Thanksgiving holiday renews focus on bird flu, rising costs - Iowa Capital Dispatch
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