Screwworm Livestock
- Eric Gay - AP
- Updated
A rancher arrives for a news conference with U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins at the Knipling-Bushland U.S. Livestock Insects Research Laboratory in Kerrville, Texas, Monday, June 8, 2026.
Eric Gay - APTags
As featured on
Three more cases of the New World screwworm have been confirmed, including one outside Texas, demonstrating the difficulty of stopping a pest that could potentially devastate the nation’s cattle industry. The U.S. Department of Agriculture announced Monday the new cases were found in a dog from New Mexico and hundreds of miles away in a goat and calf in Texas. The screwworm is actually a fly, which produces a larva that eats live flesh instead of dead material. Females lay their eggs in open wounds any any warm-blooded animal such as cattle, but wildlife, pets and occasionally even humans can be infested. Before it was irradicated in the 1960s, the fly was an annual warm-weather scourge of cattle ranchers.
Most Popular
Articles
- Man dies after water rescue on north shore of Lake Tahoe
- Investigation uncovers alleged large scale SNAP fraud scheme in Nevada
- River rescue at Ambrose Park in west Reno
- Driver dies after being ejected from vehicle
- No one hurt in rollover on Farm District Rd. in Fernley
- Hundreds protest horse fencing project in Washoe Valley
- Firefighters help man get out of the Truckee River in downtown Reno
- Car fire destroys Porsche in ArrowCreek
- West Marine closing Reno location after bankruptcy filing
- WCSD employee faces charges tied to embezzlement of school funds
Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device.
