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Cracking the Peanut Allergy - USDA Program Provides Doctors a Way to Help Children

September 27, 2017 Carl Purvis, Agricultural Marketing Service

Doctors and scientists have discovered a way to reduce the chances of children developing a common and sometimes deadly allergy. Recent studies have found that peanut allergies can be prevented in a high percentage of cases by introducing children to peanut-containing foods while they are still...

Research and Science

National Chicken Month – NASS Counts Chickens Before – and After – They Hatch

September 27, 2017 Kim Linonis, NASS Commodity Statistician, Poultry & Specialty Commodities Section

Did you know that Georgia poultry farmers produced the greatest number of chickens for meat (broilers) with 1.4 billion in 2016 followed by Alabama and Arkansas with just over 1 billion each? In all, the total value of U.S. broiler chicken production was $25.9 billion in 2016.

Research and Science

Summer Mosquito Woes Don’t End on Labor Day

September 26, 2017 Sandra Avant, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

Think it’s safe to go outside without mosquitoes bothering you? Think again! Labor Day is over, but mosquitoes are still buzzing around, waiting for their next prey. This blood-feeding pest is more than annoying, since some mosquitoes can transmit viruses that can cause diseases such as Zika.

Research and Science

Manufacturing is Relatively More Important to the Rural Economy than the Urban Economy

September 12, 2017 Sarah Low, Economic Research Service

Compared to urban areas, in 2015, manufacturing represented a greater share of both private nonfarm rural jobs (14 percent vs. 7 percent) and rural earnings (21 percent vs. 11 percent). A new report from USDA’s Economic Research Service, Rural Manufacturing at a Glance, examines the manufacturing...

Research and Science

Barbecue-Crashing Mosquitoes Beware: New Weapons Are in the Works

September 01, 2017 Jan Suszkiw, Public Affairs Specialist, Agricultural Research Service

Picture this: It’s evening. The summer’s heat is waning and you’re getting ready to bite into a freshly grilled hot dog, but a lurking predator is close by and about to make a meal of you—a blood meal, that is. You put down the hot dog and swat wildly at the winged attacker before it lands.

Research and Science