Cut funding of program to detect and block screwworm infections
US Department of Agriculture (USDA) officials have confirmed New World screwworm (NWS) in a dog in New Mexico, and Texas has three more detections, in a goat and two calves. So far, the United States has six detections of the parasitic fly in the past week.The
first two detections were announced last week were in Zavala,
Texas, but the three new detections show the insect has infiltrated more
territory in the United States, including La Salle County, Texas (two calves),
Gillespie County, Texas (goat), and now Lea County, New Mexico (dog).
Confirmed NWS infections in animals are also now
farther from the US border with Mexico, which has reported more than 27,000
cases through June 3, according to USDA data.
This situation is evolving, and we expect new information
to emerge.
“This situation is evolving, and we expect new information
to emerge as our investigation continues,” said Dudley
Hoskins, USDA undersecretary for marketing and regulatory programs. “USDA is
committed to sharing what we learn quickly, accurately, and transparently so
animal owners and local communities have the information they need to stay
vigilant.
“We are working closely with our partners in New Mexico,
Texas, and across the region to ensure we identify, contain, and respond to any
potential cases as swiftly as possible.”
USDA at odds with Texas ag commissioner
Last night US Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins voiced
growing tensions between the federal NWS response and Texas Agriculture
Commissioner Sid Miller. Miller has said the USDA’s response to the threat of
NWS was too slow.
“That is a very unserious comment, from perhaps an unserious
ag commissioner with just a few months left,” Rollins said of Miller. “It
is also a very dangerous suggestion.”
While the crux of the USDA response to the recent detections
has been releasing sterile flies into the affected areas, Miller has pushed the
federal agency to adopt the Screwworm Adult Suppression System, or SWASS, which
combines releasing sterile flies with broader use of insecticides. Miller has
urged Rollins and President Donald Trump to take more direct action, as NWS
threatens already fragile beef prices and a shrinking cattle supply.
Miller has been warning that Texas was increasingly at risk
for NWS because of a spike in activity in Mexico. Since 2024, Mexico has
documented a rise in both animal and human cases, especially in Chiapas state.
Mexico has confirmed 27,449 cases of screwworm in animals since November 2024,
and as many as 2,000 are currently active. As of February this year, 141
people in Mexico had been infected.
Yesterday Rollins
announced the USDA has launched a $100 million “New World Screwworm Grand
Challenge” to accelerate private-sector innovation. She also said that, in the
past week, more than 8,000 traps have been set along the US-Mexico border, and
tens of thousands of fly samples were being analyzed.

