1. Canada.com Tyson buys cattle and hogs to supply its beef and pork processing operations, but raises the chickens it processes into meat. Tyson's beef unit posted an operating profit $24 million, compared with a year-earlier loss of $188 million, due to higher beef prices and increased sales volume. Higher corn prices have pressured results in Tyson's chicken unit, one of the nation's largest, but higher prices of this meat have partly offset those increases. mad cow case in December 2003 and more...
Source • Springdale Morning News,AR •
2. Rain blamed for lamb, cattle price rise Rain across south-eastern Australia has hit lamb and cattle yardings hard, causing a 35 per cent fall in numbers in the past week and driving prices sky high. The eastern young cattle indicator is up 30 cents a kilogram carcass weight on the back of smaller yardings in places like Wagga, while lambs in Bendigo topped the 400 cents a kilo mark yesterday. Rain blamed for lamb, cattle price rise. Australian Meat Industry Council (AMIC) spokesman John Dorian says some processors are feeling...
Source • ABC Online,Australia •
3. Genetic test indicates hepatitis C risk Cells affect tamoxifen sensitivity No data for leaving small colon polyps Green tea benefits rheumatoid arthritis Obesity gene may not be easy excuse Published: April 30, 2007 at 3:32 PM By EMILY WALKER UPI Health Correspondent A variant of a common gene can make a person more likely to be obese than those without the gene, according to a recent British study. United Press International - Consumer Health Daily United Press International News. Cells affect tamoxifen sensitivity No data for...
Source • 4/27/2007 •
4. Critics want tighter Food and Drug Administration to ban the use of leftover pet food in hog and chicken feed for fear it could spread mad cow disease because it contains cattle parts. Meat byproducts are also common; those are the parts left over after pigs, cattle or other animals are slaughtered and the meat removed for human consumption. Now hogs are contaminated with a chemical blamed for killing dogs and cats, and new concerns have arisen that the meat could enter the human food chain. Concerns over...
Source • 4/30/2007 •
5. Ethanol Fuels High Corn Prices But now, more than ever, farmers already growing corn are growing more of it, and dairy farmers are jumping on the band-wagon to meet their needs. The USDA announced last month that ethanol production will keep corn prices at historic levels for the foreseeable future, which will undoubtedly impact local farmers. But others, who need to feed their cattle, aren't so fortunate. And Riehle says because of the amount of corn being planted in the area - the high corn prices should be considered...
Source • 18 hours ago •
6. S. Korea to open its markets to U.S. beef Al Belooshi, ambassador from Bahrain, urged American beef producers to consider slaughtering beef under halal conditions, which is similar to kosher beef. BUTTE -- South Korea is preparing to open its markets to all sorts of American beef, the Korean ambassador told about 2,000 people gathered here Monday for an economic development summit. Max Baucus, chief organizer of this week's summit, said he will not support passage of the trade agreement until Korea guarantees it will again buy...
Source • •
7. Tyson Foods Beefs Up Bottom Line Beef sales and operating improvements pushed Tyson Foods inc. to its best overall quarter since the summer of 2005, despite swings in both corn and live cattle prices. Beef has been a dismal business for the world's largest meat packer amid sagging exports and protein oversupplies that pushed prices lower for 10 consecutive quarters. Also, analysts predict stronger processing margins and adequate cattle supply in light of the winter storms that held cattle back. On Monday, the company...
Source • Springdale Morning News,AR •
8. Deer Lodge ranch commemorates western pioneers When all was said and done, Kohrs owned a million acres of land and ran cattle on 10 million acres of open range. Some 20,000 visitors come to this working cattle ranch each year to see what life was life for the first settlers in Montana. Original buildings include the ranch house, bunkhouse, blacksmith shop, ice house, granary, horse barns and cattle sheds. A cattle trader, Grant built up his herds by trading one healthy steer for two trail-worn ones. Wyrick said the ranch averages 75 to...
Source • The Prairie Star,MT •
9. Demand for corn increasing prices They should continue to see moderate increases in prices for meat and poultry products during 2007 because of the higher feed costs, which are being combined with higher energy costs, said Jeff Helms, communications director for the Alabama Farmers Federation. The corn that is used to produce ethanol is the same corn that makes up a large part of the feed for cattle and hogs, and more importantly, poultry. They should continue to see moderate increases in prices for meat and poultry...
Source • Montgomery Advertiser,AL •
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