PED Expected to Become More Difficult to Control as Weather Turns Colder

Farmscape for September 13, 2013

The chair of the Canadian Swine Health Board warns, as the weather turns colder and the risk of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea entering Canada increases, adherence to strict biosecurity protocols will become even more critical.
An outbreak of Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea, first discovered in the U.S. in mid-May, has now spread to 17 states with over 500 farms confirmed infected.
Monitoring through the Canadian Swine Health Intelligence Network indicates the disease has not shown up in Canada and biosecurity measures have been heightened to lessen the chance.
Canadian Swine Health Board Chair Florian Possberg acknowledges there's no guarantee the disease won't slip into Canada so the focus is on providing as early a warning as possible.

Clip-Florian Possberg-Canadian Swine Health Board:
The disease is a corona virus and a similar disease is Transmissible Gastroenteritis.
Typically that disease is silent during the summer months and tends to be much more prevalent in fall, winter and spring months so now we're moving into that time of the year.
We're not exactly sure how PED is going to react in the cold weather.
We suspect that it will be tougher to deal with.
As well we move into fall months and producers have to get their manure storage cleaned out.
Often liquid manure needs to go onto fields and that sort of thing and birds are moving about.
We have migration going on and all these things so there are different factors and so we are preparing to alert on some of these things that are not really an issue during the heat of the summer in terms of vectors for the movement of the disease.
The biosecurity needs to be even better in the winter months we fear.

Possberg says PED could cost our industry millions of dollars so the efforts being undertaken to keep it out are really important.
For Farmscape.Ca, I'm Bruce Cochrane.


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