New bluetongue disease outbreak in eastern France

Published Aug 19, 2024

Tridge summary

France has reported a sixth outbreak of bluetongue disease in eight days in eastern France, bringing the total to six across five northeastern departments. The disease, which is spread by insects and affects sheep, cattle, and goats, has been circulating in the Netherlands, northern Belgium, and western Germany since late last year. France started a vaccination campaign to combat the disease, increasing the number of free vaccines for farmers to 6.4 million doses, including 1.1 million for sheep and 5.3 million for cattle.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

France has reported a sixth outbreak of bluetongue disease that affects livestock in eight days, this time in eastern France, Reuters reported, citing the Marne prefecture on Thursday. The virus, which is spread by insects and can be deadly for sheep, cattle and goats, has been circulating in the Netherlands, northern Belgium and western Germany since late last year. France reported a first outbreak of the BTV3 bluetongue disease on a sheep farm near the Belgian border last week and, including Thursday's announcement, it has now reported six outbreaks in five northeastern departments. The farm ministry said last week it would speed up and extend a ...

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