logo
US Reopens Mexico Cattle Import Sites After Screwworm Battle

US Reopens Mexico Cattle Import Sites After Screwworm Battle

Newsweeka day ago
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced on Monday a phased reopening of livestock import sites along the Mexican border, beginning July 7 with Douglas, Arizona.
Agriculture Secretary Brooke L. Rollins said the decision follows weeks of intensive collaboration with Mexican authorities to combat New World Screwworm (NWS), a devastating livestock parasite that prompted the closure of all southern border ports on May 11.
Why It Matters
The extended livestock port shutdown disrupted a critical trade relationship between the U.S. and Mexico, affecting ranchers and livestock operations on both sides of the border. NWS poses an existential threat to American agriculture—the parasitic fly lays eggs in open wounds of livestock, producing maggots that burrow into living flesh, causing severe injury and often death.
The USDA successfully eradicated NWS from the United States in 1966, but its return would devastate the livestock industry and threaten food security.
The economic stakes are substantial. A similar outbreak in Florida in 2016 required euthanizing 102 infected animals, demonstrating the pest's destructive potential even in contained situations. The current threat represents the parasite's northward march through Central America over two years, reaching Mexico in November 2024 and spreading to within 700 miles of the U.S. border.
NWS has systematically moved through Panama, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, El Salvador, Belize and now Mexico, with cases detected in Oaxaca and Veracruz states.
What To Know
The reopenings span three months, with five ports gradually resuming operations. The other four are:
Columbus, New Mexico, on July 14
Santa Teresa, New Mexico, on July 21
Del Rio, Texas, on August 18
Laredo, Texas, on September 15
Each reopening will be evaluated for adverse effects before proceeding to the next phase. The parasite's rapid spread through Mexico triggered the May suspension after the USDA's February attempt to resume imports with enhanced inspection protocols proved insufficient.
The department's response included deploying sterile fly dispersal operations, releasing over 100 million sterile flies weekly to disrupt the pest's reproductive cycle. This sterile male technique, previously explained to Newsweek by Texas A&M Professor Phillip Kaufman, works because female screwworm flies mate only once—flooding areas with sterile males prevents successful reproduction. Five Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service teams conducted comprehensive on-site assessments in Mexico this month to evaluate containment efforts.
Strict import protocols now govern the reopening. Only cattle and bison born and raised in Sonora or Chihuahua, or those treated according to specific NWS protocols, qualify for import initially. Texas ports won't reopen until Coahuila and Nuevo Leon adopt similar protocols. Equines from anywhere in Mexico can be imported but require a seven-day quarantine and compliance with equine NWS protocols.
Mexico is renovating its sterile fruit fly facility in Metapa, expected to produce 60 million to 100 million sterile flies weekly by July 2026. This represents progress toward the long-term goal of producing 400 million to 500 million flies weekly to reestablish the NWS barrier at the Darién Gap.
What People Are Saying
Rollins, in a Monday statement: "At USDA we are focused on fighting the New World Screwworm's advancement in Mexico. These quick actions by the Trump Administration have improved the conditions to allow the phased reopening of select ports on the Southern Border to livestock trade. We are continuing our posture of increased vigilance and will not rest until we are sure this devastating pest will not harm American ranchers."
Speaking previously to Newsweek, Kaufman, also head of the department of entomology at Texas A&M University, said: "To eliminate the fly, especially under a more widespread infestation, requires several complimentary approaches, including monitoring for infested wounds for larvae, using fly-specific traps, and the mass release of sterile males."
He added: "The sterile male technique is crucial in this process as the female screwworm fly mates only once and by inundating the infested area with sterile males we in effect make the females lay eggs that do not hatch. As these wild females die out, the population drops, and the fly is ultimately eliminated. This takes time to accomplish but has been proven effective repeatedly."
Cattle serve as the backdrop for a roundtable discussion on the New World Screwworm at the Texas A&M Beef Center in College Station, Texas, on April 29.
Cattle serve as the backdrop for a roundtable discussion on the New World Screwworm at the Texas A&M Beef Center in College Station, Texas, on April 29.
Meredith Seaver /College Station Eagle via AP
What Happens Next
The USDA will continuously monitor each port reopening for adverse effects before proceeding to the next phase.
Officials reported no notable increase in NWS cases or northward movement over the past eight weeks, indicating progress in containment efforts. Additional improvements in Mexico's animal movement controls and surveillance efforts remain critical for remaining ports to reopen as scheduled.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What Makes Someone Cool? A New Study Offers Clues.
What Makes Someone Cool? A New Study Offers Clues.

Boston Globe

time6 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

What Makes Someone Cool? A New Study Offers Clues.

The study, published Monday in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, surveyed nearly 6,000 participants from 12 countries around the world. Their beliefs about what's 'cool' were similar regardless of where the study participants lived, and despite differences in age, income level, education, or gender. 'What blew my mind was the fact that it was pretty much the same result everywhere,' said Caleb Warren, one of the authors of the study and a professor at the Eller College of Management at the University of Arizona who has researched consumer psychology for two decades. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up In the study, each participant had to recognize the word 'cool' in English, without translation, suggesting that they were already familiar with — or maybe even idolized — notions of coolness from wealthy Western countries like the United States. Advertisement In that sense, the study offers a window into the spread of cultural beliefs from one group of people to another, said Joseph Henrich, an anthropologist and a professor of human evolutionary biology at Harvard University who was not involved in the study. 'Globally, American success has led to the diffusion of music styles and an immense amount of cultural content, including, apparently, the concept of cool,' Henrich said. Advertisement Coolness is not a widely studied subject. Past research has found that coolness is usually considered something positive: People who are cool are also friendly, competent, trendy, and attractive. But Warren and his colleagues wanted to know what makes a person distinctly 'cool' rather than just 'good.' So the researchers asked the participants to think of specific people: one who is cool, one who is not cool, one who is good, and one who is not good. Then they asked the participants to evaluate each person by answering questionnaires that collectively measured 15 different attributes. While the cool and good people had overlapping traits, compared with their cool counterparts, good people were perceived as more conforming, traditional, secure, warm, agreeable, universalistic (the extent to which a person sees everyone and everything as being equal or equally worthy of care and respect), conscientious, and calm. Those who were perceived as capable were equally considered cool and good. One limitation of the study was that anyone who did not know the word 'cool' was automatically filtered out. As a result, the data cannot determine how frequently the word is used in different countries or, whether in certain cultures, coolness will lead to a higher social status relative to others. In addition, while the study included participants with a wide range of ages, the population skewed young: The average age from each region was generally 30 or younger. Other studies have shown that there are important cultural differences that can affect the traits that we value. 'Factors like aggression make us have higher status in some Western cultures and simultaneously give us less status in the East,' said Mitch Prinstein, the chief of psychology at the American Psychological Association, who has written two books about popularity, which can be a consequence of coolness. Advertisement Research on coolness suggests that the desire to be cool is particularly strong during adolescence, and it influences not only what people buy or whom they admire, but also how they talk and what they do for fun. But what's considered cool by the broader culture might not be the same as what you personally believe is cool. This is why Warren and his colleagues asked each participant to think about the people they considered cool vs. good. Interestingly, across the board, the types of traits that are typically associated with kindness or helpfulness were more often perceived as good instead of cool. So is coolness a trait that's worth pursuing? To that end, Warren said, 'I have serious doubts.' Coolness that involves risk-taking and being socially precocious during adolescence may offer popularity during youth, but one study published in 2014 found that many teenagers who behaved in this way would later struggle in their 20s, developing problems with alcohol, drugs, and relationships. 'They are doing more extreme things to try to act cool,' one of the researchers told The New York Times. For the popular kids in school, 'status is dominance, visibility, attention,' Prinstein said. But, he added, it is how well-liked you are that contributes to long-term success. 'Even the most uncool kid will probably fare well if they have at least one close friend,' he added. Perhaps coolness -- particularly the dismissive 'too cool for school' variety -- isn't all it's cracked up to be. This article originally appeared in

Notre Dame College Prep students plant flags on campus lawn in tribute to country, fallen soldiers
Notre Dame College Prep students plant flags on campus lawn in tribute to country, fallen soldiers

Chicago Tribune

time8 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Notre Dame College Prep students plant flags on campus lawn in tribute to country, fallen soldiers

Students of Notre Dame College Prep high school in Niles put patriotism, pride and a salute to military personnel on display, staking thousands of small American flags on the campus lawn ahead of Independence Day. 'This tradition began in 2008 by math teacher Mr. John Bachta, this student-led tribute has become a cherished tradition at NDCP,' school leaders stated in a news release announcing the planting event. 'This visual tribute is more than a tradition — it's a moving show of gratitude from the next generation to those who made the ultimate sacrifice.' Installed June 24, the display is planned to remain on the lawn through July 4. 'It's a story of remembrance, community pride, and patriotism that continues to inspire,' according to the release.

Christians Among Most Likely to Ditch Their Religion
Christians Among Most Likely to Ditch Their Religion

Newsweek

time10 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Christians Among Most Likely to Ditch Their Religion

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Christians, the world's largest religious group, have one of the lowest global retention rates among major religions, a new report has found. A Pew Research Center report published last Thursday found that fewer Christians hold on to their religion than Muslims and Hindus. Why It Matters The findings carry significant implications for the future of religious demographics and global culture. Christianity, while still a majority among world religions, is losing members at a faster rate than nearly every other major tradition. The phenomenon of religious "switching"—adults changing their religious identity from that of their upbringing—has the potential to reshape communities and influence political and social identities worldwide. Notably, most switching is not to another faith, but to religious disaffiliation. These shifts are most pronounced in high-income, developed countries, raising questions about future patterns of belief and practice in both global and U.S. contexts. What To Know Some 83 percent of adults raised Christian are still Christian, according to the analysis, based on surveys from 117 countries and territories covering 92 percent of the 2010 global population. This trails both Muslims and Hindus, who each retain 99 percent of their adherents from childhood. Only Buddhists recorded a lower retention rate than Christians, at 78 percent worldwide. Overall, the analysis shows around 10 percent of adults under 55 have switched from their childhood religion, often becoming religiously unaffiliated. Disaffiliation Drives the Trend Most people who switch religions do not join another tradition; they leave religion altogether. Christians and Buddhists are the likeliest to disaffiliate, with 19 percent of those raised Buddhist and 17 percent of those raised Christian reporting no current religious affiliation. As a result, the category of the religiously unaffiliated—people who are atheist, agnostic, or "nothing in particular"—registered a net gain of nearly 17 people per 100 raised outside of any religion. File photo of a woman praying, taken during the opening service for the autumn general assembly of the German Bishops' Conference in the Fulda Cathedral in Fulda, Germany, in September 2016. File photo of a woman praying, taken during the opening service for the autumn general assembly of the German Bishops' Conference in the Fulda Cathedral in Fulda, Germany, in September 2016. AP Geography Matters: Switching By Country Development Religious switching is more common in countries with high Human Development Index (HDI) scores. In places with an HDI of 0.8 or higher, a median of 18 percent of adults under 55 have switched religious identity, compared to just 3 percent in countries with low HDI (below 0.55). Laws prohibiting religious switching in certain countries, such as Algeria, Brunei, Egypt, and Malaysia, correspond with very low reported rates of switching. The U.S. Context American trends reflect the global pattern. National surveys have shown continued Christian disaffiliation in recent years, although the pace of decline in the U.S. may be stabilizing. Pew reported that only 46 percent of Americans born after 1990 still identify as Christian. Younger adults are much more likely to claim no religion compared to seniors. Earlier this year, Newsweek reported on which states are seeing religion disappear the most. Demographic and Political Implications The shifting religious landscape impacts not just spiritual life, but also political and cultural identities worldwide. In the U.S., for instance, religious "nones" are increasing, while Christian affiliation remains higher among older and more conservative demographics. Pew's research indicates that changing belief systems among younger generations will continue to shape debates over public policy, social norms, and family structure. What People Are Saying Pew Research Center research associate Yunping Tong said in the report: "The decline is largely due to people shedding their religious identity after having been raised in a religion." Study co-author Gregory Smith: "It's striking to have observed this recent period of stability in American religion after that long period of decline." What Happens Next Demographers and religious scholars will continue to monitor how generational change and cultural transformation influence religious identity. While the immediate future shows a stabilization in the rate of religious switching in some Western countries, long-term projections remain uncertain.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store