News

Two Guatemalan pilots and a Mexican agronomist engineer have died after their plane crashed in southern Mexico near the border with Guatemala as they freed sterile flies meant to stop the spread of sc ...
With no U.S. cases yet, AgriLife's upcoming session will highlight crucial screwworm prevention strategies for ranchers.
Mexcio: Two Guatemalan pilots and a Mexican agronomist engineer died Friday when their plane crashed in southern Mexico ...
The plane was dispersing sterile flies to combat a deadly cattle parasite when it crashed near Guatemala border.
A small, pale maggot about a half-inch long could cost New Mexico cattle ranchers greatly if it gets back into the country. One of the state's senators introduced new legislation to combat the New ...
The unpredictability of Trump’s tariff policy on Mexico earlier this year has already cost cattle ranchers millions of ...
The latest halt in cattle imports via the U.S.-Mexico border comes only months after imports were stopped due to the same ...
USDA will invest $21 million to expand a Mexico facility, aiming to double sterile fly production and strengthen efforts to ...
For the second time in under six months, the U.S. is closed to cattle, sheep and bison imports through ports of entry along the southern border. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced the ...
U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins today provided an update on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s ongoing ...
A threat to American livestock – the New World Screwworm (NWS ... re-emerged as a potential danger following an outbreak in Mexico. The news triggered a shutdown of cattle, horse and bison ...