While national egg prices are going up because of the bird flu, prices in south-central Indiana remain relatively stable.
Bird flu has caused the death of some 1,500 Sandhill Cranes in Indiana. In January and February, biologists with the Indiana ...
Bird and wildlife experts say it's fine to continue to feed songbirds as long as the feeders are kept clean and no local ...
But local egg producers in south-central Indiana, as well as some Bloomington ... "I've never lost birds to the avian flu. The way our chickens are housed, in a free-range setting, I feel they ...
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Indiana animal health officials on Friday added three more farms to its list of those quarantined after avian influenza was detected. Friday’s bird flu announcement came ...
ROUGHLY 1 MILLION CRANES WILL CONVERGE ON CENTRAL NEBRASKA AS THEY MAKE THEIR WAY NORTH TO NEST FOR THE SUMMER. BUT IN INDIANA, THE BIRD FLU HAS KILLED THOUSANDS OF MIGRATING SANDHILL CRANES ...
in the south-central part of the state, in early January. Since then, as the birds have continued to fly northward, deaths have been reported in other parts of Indiana. And 1,500 deaths is likely ...
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Three more Indiana farms have been quarantined after the detection of avian influenza among birds, the State Board of Animal Health announced Thursday night. So far in 2025 ...
In late February the H5N1 strain of highly pathogenic avian influenza caused the deaths of an estimated 1,500 sandhill cranes across several counties in Indiana, according to the Indiana ...
More than 1,500 sandhill cranes have been found dead in Indiana, placing them among the latest victims of the highly contagious bird flu strain H5N1, reports the Post-Tribune’s Amy Lavalley. The tall, ...
More than 1,500 iconic sandhill cranes have been killed by bird flu in Indiana, officials say, the latest development in the spread of the highly infectious respiratory illness. Volunteers in masks ...
More than 1,500 iconic sandhill cranes have been killed by bird flu in Indiana, officials say, the latest development in the spread of the highly infectious respiratory illness. Volunteers in ...