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Heat Wave Kills Thousands Of Poultry


First Posted: 07/13/11 09:34 AM ET Updated: 09/12/11 06:12 AM ET

By ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press

WICHITA, Kan. -- A heat wave that has pushed temperatures well over 100 degrees has killed tens of thousands of turkeys and chickens in Kansas and North Carolina and left farmers across the lower part of the country struggling to cool off their flocks.

In North Carolina, about 50,000 chickens died at a farm after the power went off for less than an hour. In Kansas, one couple lost 4,300 turkeys that took 26 hours to bury.

"It felt like a war zone. It felt like hell," turkey grower Holly Capron said.

The heat wave that started over the weekend has been spreading east. Four of the nation's top turkey-producing states - Arkansas, Missouri, North Carolina and Virginia - were under a heat advisory Tuesday. Arkansas and North Carolina are also leading chicken producers.

Temperatures in Kansas on Sunday reached 110 degrees, with a heat index of 118. It was 106 in the buildings near Columbus where Capron and her husband raise 22,000 turkeys for Butterball LLC. She said they've been running big fans and fog nozzles in their poultry buildings, and they've had a tractor pulling a spray wagon to water down the birds. They lost 140 birds on Saturday, but nothing prepared them for Sunday, when 4,300 died.

After receiving approval from state regulators, the Caprons, their workers and friends began digging a massive hole - 60 feet long, 40 feet wide and 10 feet deep - to bury the nearly 50-pound birds. They started at 11 p.m. Sunday, and the last turkey was buried 26 hours later. The crew worked around the clock. No one slept.

"It was literally overwhelming during the night," Capron said. "I honestly wanted to start crying. My husband was in shock."

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She blamed the deaths on a heat spike that hit about 5:30 p.m. Sunday. The Kansas Department of Agriculture's Division of Animal Health confirmed that heat, not disease, caused the deaths, department spokeswoman Chelsea Good said.

In North Carolina, the heat wave killed about 50,000 broiler chickens at a Johnston County farm when the power went out for about 45 minutes, said Gary Rhodes, a spokesman for Colorado-based Pilgrim's Pride Corp., which owned the chickens.

Farmers in the Carolinas outfit their poultry barns with cooling systems that use fans to push mists of water over the birds or pull air through the sheds at high speed like an air tunnel. The cooling systems have prevented family-owned turkey growers Prestage Farms from suffering a mass die-off from heat for more than five years, said co-owner Scott Prestage.

"If outside the heat index is at 107, like it is right this minute, the bird in that house is feeling something that tends to be in the mid to high 80-degree range," said Prestage, whose operations produce more than 425 million pounds of live turkey a year in North Carolina and South Carolina. "We tend not to lose birds in those houses, not as long as all the equipment is operating properly."

A power outage, though, can be deadly.

"With the new ventilation systems in these houses, they can handle the heat pretty good," said Bob Ford, executive director of the North Carolina Poultry Federation. "Most everybody's converted their houses to that type of system, and you just have to keep your fingers crossed I guess."

John Bryan, spokesman for the Missouri Poultry Federation, a trade organization, said he hadn't heard of the heat causing similar problems in Missouri. But he said producers are vigilant during the summer, making sure the turkeys move around and get plenty of water.

"It's summer in Missouri, and they know the routine," Bryan said. "They're constantly out checking their flocks. They've got field managers and that's what they do every day. They all watch them a little more closely because it's such a heat wave. ... It's the same with the chicken people. They're out there watching."

One thing farmers watch for, he said, is making sure the turkeys haven't bunched up together in the heat, which can cause them to smother.

"A lot of them will just get in a pile," Bryan said "They do sometimes get by the doors, which maybe will have a breeze, and sometimes they'll just get in a heap."

___

Associated Press writers Maria Fisher in Kansas City, Mo., and Emery Dalesio in Raleigh, N.C., contributed to this report.

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By ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press WICHITA, Kan. -- A heat wave that has pushed temperatures well over 100 degrees has killed tens of thousands of turkeys and chickens in Kansas and North Carolina...
By ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press WICHITA, Kan. -- A heat wave that has pushed temperatures well over 100 degrees has killed tens of thousands of turkeys and chickens in Kansas and North Carolina...
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raegrant5
Book-em Dano
09:06 PM on 07/18/2011
It is sad that these birds died of the heat because now we will have to pay yet higher prices at the market. Sorry that the animals are at the bottom of the food chain and I agree they do diserve better treatment than most of them get. But trying to shut them all down is not going to happen. People need to eat and birds and other animals will continue to be our food. If you don't like it don't eat it. Enough of you stop eating meat and maybe the rest of us can afford to keep eating!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cabinetmaniac
Think for yourself. Question authority.
08:52 AM on 07/18/2011
The heat wave didn't kill the turkeys.

Factory farming killed the turkeys.

☮
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pjkool
12:07 AM on 07/14/2011
You're citing 10 years of petroleum industry backed propaganda promoted by right wing talk radio. The rest of us are talking about 40 years of evidence based, measurable, observable, scientific research conducted by credentialed academics.
Let's try not to be insulting toward fellow Americans. Your comment reflects the kind of vitriol that has been promoted by right wing talk radio over the last twenty years.
Why do conservatives always bring up guns even when it's not part of the conversation?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
g-moi
Let's GoGreen. We Can Do It.
03:31 PM on 07/13/2011
This is disgusting, this means they burned alive. We have got to stop this factory farming crud where all the animals are boxed in indoors in horrific conditions. Go veggie!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
01:11 PM on 07/13/2011
Yet another reason to go Vegan !!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floridan56
Irony: it's what's for dinner.
10:53 AM on 07/13/2011
Dare I say that, considering the surface area of such barns, solar would be an excellent back-up if not full time, reliable power scource to keep these birds cool. Power Co. should provide or be liable - livestock should not be at the mercy of the efficiency of the 'power companies'- like the rest of us. This will reoccur more frequently and in even greater mass, the way things are heading.
Look away now. "No such thing as climate change. nothing to see here".
Bless you farmers. It must have been one horrific nightmare, but real. Caring hearts are with you.
11:02 AM on 07/13/2011
good suggestion, why not fit all the roofs with solar panels as a backup system then they could get those portable ac units and place them around the barn.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
09:43 AM on 07/13/2011
When manufacturing farm creatures, putting them in aluminum sweat houses causes creatures die. Oh duh. This is another reason to get rid of such abusive practices.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
floridan56
Irony: it's what's for dinner.
11:10 AM on 07/13/2011
"serves 'em right?" That's pretty harsh, friend.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
11:18 AM on 07/13/2011
It makes me sick to my stomach how these animals are treated. I am horrified at how ugly their deaths must have been.

I have no sympathy for the corporations who contract or own these farms.
09:35 AM on 07/13/2011
A heat wave in the summer????

How awfull. Must mean global warming.

Or not.

Since according to Robert Kaufmann's paper that was widely reported here on the HP there was NO GLOBAL WARMING from 1998 to 2008.

What a shame. All you global warming alarmists will have to figure out something else to talk about now.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pjkool
10:14 AM on 07/13/2011
I'd like to talk about the right wing war on science and education every day, front page!
02:09 PM on 07/13/2011
It's a shame you and your friends can't read published and accepted scientific papers which clearly state "...global surface temperatures did not rise between 1998 and 2008..." and have trouble undertanding what that means.

But then, folks like you read "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed" and come away with "gun bans are OK".

I'd suggest going back and completing the 1st grade. Your reading ability is 'challenged'.
BlackbirdHighway
Brawndo's got electrolites!
10:44 AM on 07/13/2011
"from 1998 to 2008"

Way to cherry pick those years! You picked the warmest year in the 90's and coolest year in the 2000's. This is not how the warming trend is measured. If you happened to pick 1997 and 2007, or 1999 and 2009, or any other pair of years in the 90's and 2000's you would get wildly different results. So that is absolute rubbish.

The warming trend is accurately measured by looking at averages that smooth out normal year to year variations. I suggest you look at the average over each of the decades.

Here is how you do it properly:
http://pubs.giss.nasa.gov/docs/2010/2010_Hansen_etal.pdf
11:39 AM on 07/13/2011
So you reject robert kaufmann's pale and his theories and conclusions?

I don't think that will go over very well with the hp staff since they chronicled his paper and heralded his results.
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09:17 AM on 07/13/2011
Clearly, this is Obama's fault.
09:35 AM on 07/13/2011
Well, it does look like a picture of his cabinet after all.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BuckyJamesDio
This monkey's going to Heaven
09:50 AM on 07/13/2011
I blame Al Gore. He invented heat.
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09:58 AM on 07/13/2011
; o ]
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ILoveFiction
That's unbelievable!
11:50 AM on 07/13/2011
That's right.

Every time he talks it gets hotter.