This story will be continually updated as new cases are reported to the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
To date, 925 dairy herds in 16 states have been found to be carrying Highly-Pathological Avian Influenza (HPAI), a virus originally found in wild birds and usually associated with turkey and poultry flocks. The first known transmission found in a dairy cow herd was announced on March 25 by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), with herds in Kansas and Texas suffering from illness and testing positive.
Since the original diagnosis, herds in New Mexico, Ohio, Idaho, Michigan, North Carolina, Colorado, Iowa, Minnesota, South Dakota, California, Oklahoma, Utah, Nevada, and Wyoming have been identified as carrying HPAI. The USDA has created a webpage with a list of the date each herd was diagnosed.
USDA, APHIS
Symptoms
Some dairy cows have tested positive for HPAI despite being asymptomatic, per the USDA. In a majority of cases, dairy cattle have shown symptoms such as these listed by the Kansas Department of Agriculture:
“Symptoms are mostly restricted to late-stage lactating cows and include a drop in milk production, loss of appetite, and changes in manure consistency. We encourage dairy producers to minimize wildlife access to their dairy cattle’s water and feed sources.”
While HPAI is normally fatal for poultry and turkey, dairy cows are generally able to recover in about two weeks when receiving treatment. A Reuters report confirmed that cows infected with bird flu have been culled or died in five of the 16 U.S. states with confirmed cases.
What the USDA is Doing
USDA said in a press release that the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) released 239 genetic sequences found in the recent H5N1 and HPAI influenza viruses found in dairy cattle and poultry for interested researchers.
USDA, APHIS
“APHIS is urging dairy cattle producers and those who work in or with the industry to share epidemiological information from affected farms, even if they are not planning to move cattle interstate,” the release stated.
USDA emphasized the CDC’s assessment that humans are at low risk of contracting the disease. Human cases have been on the rise, and a person in Louisiana was the first person to die from complications of H5N1.
On August 28, in a press conference at a farm show in Iowa, Vilsack announced that the USDA has approved field testing on an H5N1 vaccine for cattle.
AABP Decision to Refer to Disease in Cattle By a Different Name
In an open letter dated April 8, 2024, the American Association of Bovine Practitioners (AABP) presented an argument that because the disease in cattle doesn’t cause high morbidity and mortality as it does in birds, it should not be referenced as “HPAI in cattle” or “bird flu in cattle.”
The group will instead call the disease Bovine Influenza A Virus (BIAV) in its messaging and applicable resources.
The AABP encourages other organizations, state animal health officials, diagnostic labs, and state and federal agencies to use the name to better distinguish between the diseases in cattle and in birds. Ultimately, the group believes that “it is important for the public to understand the difference to maintain confidence in the safety and accessibility of beef and dairy products for consumers.”
What the FDA is Doing
The FDA found particles of HPAI in samples of pasteurized milk, but in a release said that it has full confidence in the safety of milk sold in grocery stores.
“Based on available information, pasteurization is likely to inactivate the virus, however the process is not expected to remove the presence of viral particles,” the FDA said in a report published by Reuters.
California at Center of Outbreak
In the last two months, California has emerged as the state with the most cases of HPAI in cattle. Since the start of the outbreak in March 2024, APHIS has reported 712 confirmed cases of HPAI in dairy cattle in California. In the last 30 days alone, California has confirmed 47 livestock herds with positive tests for H5N1.
Human infections have been on the rise in the state as well.
California produces the most dairy products of any state in the U.S.
Outbreak Timeline
Successful Farming will continue publishing stories on the HPAI/dairy cow situation. Here is an updated list of our coverage from 2024:
December
November
- Nov. 25: California Finds Bird Flu Virus in Raw Milk
- Nov. 8: Bird Flu in 7% of Unprotected Farmworkers Exposed to Infected Dairy Cows, Says CDC
- Nov. 4: Two Additional Human Cases of Bird Flu Boost U.S. Total to 41
- Nov. 1: Secretary Vilsack Discusses Pure Prairie Poultry Closure, Bird Flu Dairy Testing Program
- Nov. 1: Bird Flu Found in Eight Dairy Herds in Utah, 15th State
October
- Oct. 31: U.S. Detects H5N1 Bird Flu in a Pig for the First Time
- Oct. 31: U.S. to Begin Bulk Milk Testing for Bird Flu After Push from Industry
- Oct. 23: State and Industry Input Led U.S. Farm Agency to Relax Bird Flu Testing Order for Cows
- Oct. 22: Poultry Workers Treated for Avian Flu Infections in Washington State
- Oct. 18: Five additional human cases of bird flu in California, more expected
- Oct. 15: Bird flu: 20 people ill, 300 herds infected since March
- Oct. 10: Five California farmworkers have mild cases of bird flu, says state
- Oct. 7: CDC conducting extensive probe into bird flu contracted by Missouri resident
- Oct. 7: USDA: Slowdown in detections suggests bird flu is being contained in cattle
- Oct. 4: California reports bird flu in two people in contact with infected cows
- Oct. 4: California dairy worker has bird flu, first in the state
September
- Sept. 30: Five Missouri healthcare workers with respiratory symptoms to be tested for bird flu
- Sept. 27: U.S. farmers call for vaccine option to fight bird flu as wildfowl migration begins
- Sept. 24: Number of California dairy herds with bird flu triples in a week
- Sept. 23: Missouri health worker who had contact with bird flu patient develops symptoms, U.S. officials report
- Sept. 16: Bird flu spreads among California dairy herds
- Sept. 13: Federal officials say no sign bird flu is spreading among humans, despite Missouri case
- Sept. 12: Origin of human bird flu case in Missouri still unknown, U.S. CDC says
- Sept. 9: Human bird flu case not linked to animal exposure reported in Missouri
- Sept. 4: Fake cows ready for milking at U.S. state fairs as bird flu threat looms
- Sept. 3: California quarantines three dairy farms hit by bird flu outbreaks
August
- Aug. 26: Bird flu takes a summer break
- Aug. 13: U.S. to expand bird-flu testing of beef in slaughterhouses
- Aug. 12: Risk assessment validates ongoing U.S. response to H5N1 virus, says CDC
- Aug. 9: Milk tank tests find 10 Colorado herds infected with bird flu
July
- July 31: Worried about bird flu mutation, feds seek livestock worker vaccinations
- July 26: Bird flu spreads among Colorado farmworkers, with nine infected in two weeks
- July 23: More northeastern Colorado poultry workers infected with bird flu
- July 16: ISU research identifies possible point of entry for avian flu in cattle
- July 15: Bird flu virus detected in Oklahoma dairy herd
- July 15: Few Missouri dairy cows have been tested for bird flu virus
- July 15: Colorado workers are first since 2022 to catch bird flu from poultry
- July 2: Bird flu concern prompts U.S. to award Moderna $176 million for vaccine development
- July 1: FDA says milk-processing practices kill H5N1 virus
June
- June 28: Two more Iowa dairy herds reported with avian flu
- June 25: USDA: Expect more cases of bird flu in dairy cattle
- June 25: Four states to begin voluntary testing for bird flu in dairy farm milk tanks
- June 25: What can farmers learn from the current bird flu outbreak in dairy cows?
- June 17: Bird flu found in two more Iowa dairy herds
- June 14: Two dozen companies working to find bird flu vaccine for cows, U.S. agriculture secretary says
- June 14: H5N1 virus was spread by cattle, people, and shared equipment
- June 11: Iowa asks USDA to compensate farmers for cows culled due to H5N1 virus
- June 10: Iowa identifies second dairy with bird flu, expands testing
- June 7: Block sales of raw milk that may contain H5N1 virus, FDA asks states
- June 6: Bird flu infects dairy herd in Iowa, 10th state to be hit
- June 6: Cows infected with bird flu have died in five U.S. states
- June 6: Bird flu outbreak reported in Minnesota dairy herd, the state’s first
- June 4: USDA aims to isolate, exhaust H5N1 virus in dairy herds
- June 4: Bird flu’s spread from poultry to cattle to humans provokes worry among feds, states
- June 3: Farmworkers face high-risk exposures to bird flu, but testing isn’t reaching them
May
- May 31: In a first, farmworker infected with bird flu has respiratory symptoms
- May 31: U.S. allows bulk milk testing for bird flu before cattle transport
- May 28: USDA assesses vaccine to protect cattle from bird flu virus
- May 23: Dairy worker in Michigan has bird flu in second case of cow-to-human infection
- May 24: Many U.S. dairy workers yet to receive protective gear for bird flu
- May 23: Dairy worker in Michigan has bird flu in second case of cow-to-human infection
- May 20: Feds incentivize better biosecurity at dairy farms for bird flu
- May 13: USDA and HHS allot $199 million to quash bird flu threat to cattle and humans
- May 9: ‘Absolute barrier’ against spread of bird flu virus is impossible, says Califf
- May 6: CDC: Texas farmworker only person known to contract bird flu from cattle
- May 6: How bird flu could threaten cow cuddling. Yes, it is a thing.
- May 3: H5N1 virus was undetected for months in dairy cattle, researchers say
- May 2: Bird flu virus likely travels from cow to cow via milk, says USDA
- May 1: Bird flu testing shows more dairy products are safe, U.S. FDA says
April
- April 29: FDA: Bird flu viral fragments in milk were dead; pasteurization works
- April 29: USDA to test ground beef in U.S. states with outbreaks of bird flu in dairy cows
- April 26: Bird flu traces found in one in five U.S. commercial milk samples, says FDA
- April 25: USDA mandates bird flu tests of dairy cows before transport
- April 25: Colombia becomes first country to restrict U.S. beef due to bird flu in dairy cows
- April 24: U.S. FDA says commercial milk safe despite bird flu virus presence
- April 24: U.S. requires bird flu tests for dairy cattle moving between states
- April 23: Bird flu virus susceptible to antiviral meds used against seasonal flu, says CDC
- April 22: USDA assesses vaccine to protect cattle from bird flu virus
- April 22: USDA confirms cow-to-cow transmission a factor in bird flu spread
- April 15: USDA: Test for bird flu before interstate transport of cattle
- April 11: HPAI found in dairy cows in seventh state
- April 11: Bird flu pushes U.S. dairy farmers to ban visitors, chop trees
- April 9: Hog farmers hope to fly past bird flu
- April 4: Bird flu dairy cow outbreak widens in Ohio, Kansas, New Mexico
- April 4: CDC: Bird flu virus lacks changes to make it a greater threat to people
- April 2: Texas, CDC say bird influenza detected in person exposed to dairy cattle