Secretary Rollins Shuts Down Southern Ports

Secretary Rollins Shuts Down U.S. Southern Border Ports to Livestock Trade due to New World Screwworm

(Washington, D.C., July 9, 2025)- Yesterday, Mexico’s National Service of Agro-Alimentary Health, Safety, and Quality (SENASICA) reported a new case of New World Screwworm (NWS) in Ixhuatlan de Madero, Veracruz in Mexico, which is approximately 160 miles northward of the current sterile fly dispersal grid, on the eastern side of the country and 370 miles south of the U.S./Mexico border. This new northward detection comes approximately two months after northern detections were reported in Oaxaca and Veracruz, less than 700 miles away from the U.S. border, which triggered the closure of our ports to Mexican cattle, bison, and horses on May 11, 2025.

U.S. Strategy

While USDA announced a risk-based phased port re-opening strategy for cattle, bison, and equine from Mexico beginning as early as July 7, 2025, this newly reported NWS case raises significant concern about the previously reported information shared by Mexican officials and severely compromises the outlined port reopening schedule of five ports from July 7-September 15. Therefore, in order to protect American livestock and our nation’s food supply, Secretary Rollins has ordered the closure of livestock trade through southern ports of entry effective immediately.

“The United States has promised to be vigilant — and after detecting this new NWS case, we are pausing the planned port reopening’s to further quarantine and target this deadly pest in Mexico. We must see additional progress combatting NWS in Veracruz and other nearby Mexican states in order to reopen livestock ports along the Southern border,” said U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins. “Thanks to the aggressive monitoring by USDA staff in the U.S. and in Mexico, we have been able to take quick and decisive action to respond to the spread of this deadly pest.”

To ensure the protection of U.S. livestock herds, USDA is holding Mexico accountable by ensuring proactive measures are being taken to maintain a NWS free barrier. This is maintained with stringent animal movement controls, surveillance, trapping, and following the proven science to push the NWS barrier south in phases as quickly as possible.

Treatment

In June, Secretary Rollins launched a Bold Plan to combat New World Screwworm (PDF, 434 KB) by protecting our border at all costs, increasing eradication efforts in Mexico, and increasing readiness. USDA also announced the groundbreaking of a sterile fly dispersal facility in South Texas. This facility will provide a critical contingency capability to disperse sterile flies should a NWS detection be made in the southern United States. Simultaneously, USDA is moving forward with the design process to build a domestic sterile fly production facility to ensure it has the resources to push NWS back to the Darien Gap. USDA is working on these efforts in lockstep with border states – Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas – as it will take a coordinated approach with federal, state, and local partners to keep this pest at bay and out of the U.S.

USDA will continue to have personnel perform site visits throughout Mexico to ensure the Mexican government has adequate protocols and surveillance in place to combat this pest effectively and efficiently.

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Is The IGG in Milk Replacer Doing Its Job?

Is The IGG in Your Milk Replacer Doing Its Job?

NEWS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Tuesday, July 9, 2024

There is New research showing the specificity of IgG contained in milk replacers varies widely.

(New Castle, DE) When it comes to the IgG antibodies in milk replacer, not all calf milk replacers are the same. New research presented at the American Dairy Science Association’s annual meeting in June, revealed a vast difference in the total amount of IgG contained in milk replacers, and in the specificity of that IgG to bind to and remove enteric pathogens that target pre-weaned calves.

Sparking the Curiosity

It was a conversation with a veterinarian at a trade show that sparked the idea for the analysis, explains Dr. Shawn Jones, Process and Development Manager at Arkion Life Sciences. The veterinarian oversaw a calf ranch that had a recurring issue with rotavirus infections. In discussing the issue with some of his colleagues, someone was telling him that the milk replacer contains antibodies effective against rotavirus that might take care of the issue. However, it clearly wasn’t working for him. “That’s what got us thinking, how can we design a test to measure the specificity of IgG in milk replacers?” says Jones.

Testing the Replacers

Five commercially available calf milk replacers were in the selection for analysis. The manufacturing of all products were with milk components only. Products from DFA, Denkavit, Land O’Lakes, Milk Specialties Global, and Provimi North America were used and were all compared on the same basis (a 10 oz. dose). To do the analysis, first a commercial ELISA kit was used to determine total IgG titers in each milk replacer sample. The IgG concentration ranged from 2.01 mg/g to 12.16 mg/g of milk replacer.

Next the IgG was extracted and purified from the milk replacers and then labeled with a horseradish peroxidase. Direct ELISAs were then conducted against nine antigens that cause scours in calves: Bovine rotavirus, Bovine coronavirus, Cryptosporidium parvum, E. coli (mix of K88, K99, 987P and F41), Salmonella Typhimurium, Salmonella Dublin, Salmonella Heidelberg, Clostridium perfringens (Type A and Type C/D). Each milk replacer sample was run in triplicate for each of the nine antigens tested.

Report results has the absorbance at 450nm (A450). The A450 value is the raw output from the ELISA and is a measure of how much IgG is binding to the specific antigen of interest. The higher the A450 value the higher the specificity of the IgG antibodies for a specific antigen. The A450 values are not comparable between antigens, only between milk replacer samples for the same antigen.

All samples were randomized to remove brand identifiers and to focus on the data analysis.
Results are below:

“Our analysis shows there was a wide variance in both the total amount of IgG, and the specificity of the IgG in the five commercial milk replacers in the tests,” says Jones. For example, even though Sample A and Sample E contained similar amounts of total IgG (11.1 mg/g vs 12.2 mg/g), Sample E had significantly higher A450 values (indicating higher specificity) for each antigen tested. High total IgG in a sample does not necessarily mean that the IgG has high specificity for the antigens on your farm. In order to assess a calf milk replacer’s ability to boost passive immunity on your farm, testing of both total IgG and the specificity of that IgG should be complete. These results demonstrate the dairy industry’s need for a testing service that can accurately determine the specificity of IgG to various antigens. That’s why later this year

Arkion Life Sciences will launch its Antibody Specificity Testing Service through Bio-Technical Resources, a division of Arkion, in Manitowoc, WI. The ELISA-based service will offer specificity testing of antibody-containing products or ingredients such as milk replacer, colostrum replacer, whey protein concentrate, and serum or plasma.

Summary

“This type of test has not been available before,” says Dr. Roger Saltman, consulting veterinarian, RLS Management Solutions, Cazenovia, NY “Few people have even
consideration of how much IgG is available in the milk replacer using on the farm, or what gut pathogens that the IgG is specific to.” But this new antibody specificity test, will allow for the assessment of this important characteristic of milk replacers, and can be of use as part of a medical workup when a scours outbreak occurs at a dairy or calf ranch. The first line of defense against pathogens for pre-weaned calves is the gut. The ability to select the best milk replacer with the highest IgG specificity for the pathogens that impact your calves will be an important new management tool.

To learn more about the research go to www.egceligy.com or use the QR code below to view the ADSA presentation for Abstract 2199 “Measuring IgG and Specificity in Milk Replacers.”

About Arkion

Arkion® Life Sciences is a technology-based company that discovers, develops,
manufactures and markets environmentally friendly products and technologies that
provide modern solutions to today’s most significant problems. Arkion prices itself on
making innovative patent protected products that solve challenging problems for industrial
and consumer use.

CONTACT INFORMATION:

Michelle Tollefson, Director of Business & Marketing
EgCel® IgY Technology Business Unit
Phone: 302-504-7413
Email: mtollefson@arkionls.com
Website: www.egceligy.com

July 2024

Article and images courtesy of Arkion Life Sciences

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SweetPro Feeds Announces New Board Members

SweetPro Feeds Announces Two New Board Members

Walhalla, ND. Harvest Fuel Inc., dba SweetPro Feeds announced today the appointment of two new members to the board of directors. Nathan Ogden and John Goihl.

Nathan Ogden is President and owner of Fayetteville, Arkansas based, Pick-it Construction, a commercial and residential construction company. A user of SweetPro products, Nathan also owns Ogden Ranch in Prairie Grove, AR. Ogden Ranch produces both registered Angus and Angus-influenced commercial cattle. Nathan and his wife Tracy have two children, Oaklie and Huntlea.

John Goihl is owner of 3-D Nutrition Services LLC in Shakopee, MN and former President and owner of Agri-Nutrition Services Inc (45 years).  John is a feed nutritionist and consultant specializing in swine and poultry. He is a prolific author and a regular contributor to industry periodicals and scientific journals. John was also a long-time board member of the Agricultural Utilization Research Institute (AURI) where the use of DDGS in livestock diets was a focus.  John is always innovating and improving the efficiency of production agriculture. He is a contributing member of several professional agricultural organizations.

Nathan and John’s broad business experience in agriculture and other industries will be a benefit to HFI as it builds on its current premium supplement and ingredient products.

About Harvest Fuel Inc.

HFI Inc was founded in 1991 to create unique Distillers Grain based supplements for cattle, horses, sheep and goats. It’s focus is on non-molasses, fermentation oriented products to support forage utilization and mineral intake. Starting in 2003, it introduced ProBiotein®, a postbiotic yeast culture with multiple prebiotic fibers and a broad amino acid profile.

July 2024

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