national scrapie eradication program
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National Scrapie Eradication April 2014 Monthly Report
National Scrapie Eradication ProgramFiscal Year 2014 Report
October 1, 2013 to September 30, 2014
U.S. Department of AgricultureAnimal and Plant Health Inspection Service
Veterinary ServicesSurveillance, Response and Preparedness Services
Sheep and Goat Health Center
Prepared January 15, 2015
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INTRODUCTION
The National Scrapie Eradication Program focuses on seven primary areas:
• Education and prevention• Animal identification and compliance• Surveillance [Regulatory Scrapie Slaughter Surveillance (RSSS) and on-farm]• Tracing and testing positive and exposed animals• Cleanup of infected and source flocks through genetic susceptibility testing and indemnification
of susceptible exposed animals• Monitoring of previously infected and exposed flocks • The Scrapie Free Flock Certification Program (SFCP)
Introduction - Program Summary
INTRODUCTION
Program Summary
At the end of FY 2014, the percent of cull sheep found positive at slaughter and adjusted for face color was 0.02 percent (Chart 1). This measure of prevalence has decreased by 88 percent since slaughter surveillance started in FY 2003.
The scrapie program is now at the “tail end” of the eradication process with few animals found positive during slaughter sampling and the annual variation in the number of animals found positive between years falls within the error of the measurement, given the sample size and 95% confidence limits. As a result there is no statistically significant change in the annual detection rate of scrapie between FY 2013 and 2014 in slaughtered animals.
Eight source flocks (including 2 goat herds) and 3 infected flocks were designated in FY 2013. Three source flocks and 3 infected flocks were designated in FY 2014 (Chart 2), a decrease of 45 percent.
Veterinary Services Reorganization
In November 2013, administrative units within APHIS Veterinary Services reorganized from 2 Regions to 6 Districts (Figure 1); some of the table and charts in this report are based on these district divisions. The distribution of sheep and goat populations by District is depicted in Chart 3.
Introduction - Program Summary
SURVEILLANCE
Scrapie Surveillance Initiative
To rapidly find the last cases of scrapie and document freedom from scrapie we are asking producers and accredited veterinarians to report sheep or goats showing signs of scrapie and to collect and submit samples from dead or euthanized sheep/goats over 18 months of age.
More information on how to report clinical animals and to submit samples is available on the APHIS Scrapie Website.
State Sampling Minimums
The National Scrapie Eradication Program establishes annual sheep sampling minimums for each State, and tracks the States’ level of compliance with meeting these minimums. These State minimums were implemented in FY 2010 to ensure adequate geographical representation, so that APHIS can find the last remaining cases and document freedom from scrapie. State sampling minimums are established based on the population demographics of mature sheep in each State. Since FY2011, the program has also proposed annual State sampling minimums for goats. The calculations used to derive the sampling minimums are described in the National Scrapie Surveillance Plan.
Introduction – Surveillance (Part 1)Introduction – Surveillance (Part 1)
SURVEILLANCE
The State sampling minimums for sheep and goats, and the percentage of sampling minimum obtained by State of Animal ID for each District are listed in in the following tables;
A State’s percentage is based on the total number of sheep and total number of goats sampled through Regulatory Scrapie Slaughter Surveillance (RSSS) and on-farm surveillance.
Figure 2 and Figure 3 are graphic representations of the percentage of the sampling minimum for sheep and for goats that was achieved by each State in FY 2014.
District 1 Table 1 District 4 Table 4
District 2 Table 2 District 5 Table 5
District 3 Table 3 District 6 Table 6
Introduction – Surveillance (Part 2)
SURVEILLANCE
Introduction – Surveillance (Part 1)Introduction – Surveillance (Part 1)
Regulatory Scrapie Slaughter Surveillance (RSSS)
RSSS started April 1, 2003. It is a targeted slaughter surveillance program which is designed to identify infected flocks. Samples have been collected from 443,738 animals since April 1, 2003. There have been 474 NVSL confirmed positive animals (466 classical cases and 8 Nor98-like cases) since the beginning of RSSS. 45,826 samples were collected in FY 2014, 8,130 of which were from goats. Collection sites by state are shown in Figure 4. The number of animals collected for FY 2014 by District where collected is shown in Chart 4. A monthly comparison of RSSS collections by fiscal year is displayed in Chart 5. Percent of RSSS samples collected by face color and species from FY 2003 through FY 2014 is plotted in Chart 6. 2 white-faced and 3 black-faced sheep tested positive for scrapie in FY 2014. Chart 7 and Chart 8 show the percent of samples that have tested positive for each face color from FY 2003 through 2014; Chart 1 shows the percent of cull sheep found positive at slaughter and adjusted for face color. Positive animals from the same flock and Nor98-like cases are not included in these charts. A retrospective 6 month rolling average of the percent positive, black-faced sheep sampled at RSSS collections sites is shown in Chart 9. Success in tracing RSSS positive animals to flock of origin is shown in Chart 10. Changes in traceability are not statistically significant due to the small numbers of cases.
SURVEILLANCE
Introduction – Surveillance (Part 1)Introduction – Surveillance (Part 1)
On-Farm Surveillance
Testing of animals in the field has always been part of scrapie surveillance (regulatory field cases and live-animal testing). As the National Scrapie Eradication Program moves closer towards meeting the goal of identifying the last remaining cases of classical scrapie by 2017, finding and testing all sheep and goats meeting targeted sampling criteria is even more important. 1,739 sheep and 639 goats were tested on-farm for FY 2014. In FY 2014, sixteen sheep and 10 goats tested positive for scrapie; 3 of the 10 positive goats tested positive at a quarantined research facility after removal from the herd. The number of animals tested on-farm by month and by species for FY 2014 is shown in Chart 11.
Total Animals Sampled for Scrapie Testing
48,204 animals were sampled for scrapie testing in FY 2014:45,826 RSSS samples and 2,378 on-farm samples [includes regulatory testing (necropsy and live-animal) and on-farm surveillance] (Chart 12); Of which 39,435 were sheep and 8,769 were goats.
Distribution of sampling by type (RSSS or on-farm) and by species is shown in Chart 13.
SCRAPIE POSITIVE CASES
Samples collected through RSSS from 2 white-faced and 3 black-faced sheep tested positive in FY 2014. The flock of origin of the first white-faced RSSS positive sheep (reported in November 2013) was designated a source flock; 15 additional sheep (Finn sheep) from this flock tested positive for scrapie (Table 7 and Figure 5). The second white-faced RSSS positive sheep was reported in May 2014; the genotype of this animal was AVQR, a rare genotype for positive sheep in the United States. The flock of origin was designated source, and a mottled-face sheep from this flock tested positive in September; the genotype of this animal was also AVQR. The most recent black-faced positive (reported in September 2014) was traced to the flock of origin. The flock of origin could not be determined for 2 black-faced RSSS positive sheep (reported in April, these sheep were from the same slaughter consignment and so likely originated from the same flock).
Ten goats from the same herd tested positive in FY 2014; 7 were tested on-farm and 3 were later tested at a quarantined research facility. The positive goats were commingled with sheep in a previously identified infected flock. The total number of confirmed positive cases in goats since FY 2002 is 39. The most recent cases were reported in February 2014. (Table 7 and Figure 6).
INFECTED AND SOURCE FLOCKS
At the beginning of FY 2014, there were 9 flocks with open infected or source statuses (Table 8and Figure 7). During the year, 3 new source flocks and 3 new infected flocks were reported (Figure 8); 9 flocks completed a clean-up plan and were released (Figure 9). At the end of 2014, 4 scrapie-infected and source flocks had open statuses (Figure 10). New infected and source statuses from FY 1997 to FY 2014 are shown in Chart 2.
Indemnity
Approximately 643 (560 sheep and 83 goats) sheep and goats were indemnified in FY 2014. A breakdown by species and registration status is depicted on Chart 14. The average cost for indemnity and disposal was approximately $212 per animal.
Introduction – Positive Cases and New Infected/Source Flocks
SCRAPIE FLOCK CERTIFICATION PROGRAM (SFCP)
At the end of FY 2014, there were 455 flocks participating in the Scrapie Flock Certification Program (SFCP). Statuses of these flocks were 177 export monitored, 18 export certified, and 260 select monitored flocks (Figure 11). SFCP open statuses by fiscal year from FY 1997 to FY 2014 are depicted in Chart 15.
The current version of the SFCP standards was published June 20, 2013. A copy of the standards can be downloaded from APHIS’
SFCP Web Page
Note: In June 2013, the Complete Monitored category of the SFCP was eliminated. Flocks with “Complete Monitored” and “Certified” status had the option of converting to the “Export” category or “Select” category. The flocks listed as “Certified” on the APHIS website concurrently hold Export Monitored status, and are working toward Export Certified status.
This report is based on information and test results available at the time of report generation. Numbers are subject to change due to later reporting of test results and updates in the database.
Introduction – Scrapie Flock Certification Program (SFCP)
Sheep and Goat Herds in Scrapie National DatabaseCompared to NASS 2012 Census Data
Figure 12 and Figure 13 are maps showing the percent of sheep and goat flocks/herds by state that have been assigned premises/flock identification numbers in the scrapie database.
This report is based on information and test results available at the time of report generation. Numbers are subject to change due to later reporting of test results and updates in the database.
Introduction – Scrapie Flock Certification Program (SFCP)
Adjusted to exclude multiple positive animals from the same flock. Does not include Nor98-like scrapie cases found through RSSS (2 in FY 2007, 1 in FY 2008, 4 in FY 2010, 1 in FY 2011).
(Chart 1)
0.00%
0.02%
0.04%
0.06%
0.08%
0.10%
0.12%
0.14%
0.16% % Pos '03
% Pos '04
% Pos '05
% Pos '06
% Pos '07
% Pos '08
% Pos '09
% Pos '10
% Pos '11
% Pos '12
% Pos '13
% Pos '14
Percent of RSSS Sheep Samples that Tested Positive for Classical Scrapie - Weighted by Face Color
Fiscal Years 2003 to 2014
(Chart 2)
Infected and Source Flocks New Statuses by Year - Fiscal Years 1997 to 2014FY
'98
FY '0
0FY
'02
FY '0
4FY
'06
FY '0
8FY
'10
FY '1
2FY
'14
020406080
100120140160180
#REF! #REF!
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VI
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PR
PA
OR
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL
ID
IA
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
CO
CA
AZAR
AK
AL
District One
District Two
District Three
District Four
District Five
District Six
(Figure 1)
Surveillance Preparedness and Response Services (SPRS) Districts
Total Sheep and Goat Populations by VS DistrictFY 2014*
District 1 District 2 District 3 District 4 District 5 District 6**0
200,000
400,000
600,000
800,000
1,000,000
1,200,000
1,400,000
1,600,000
1,800,000
(Chart 3)
* Source: NASS Sheep and Goat January 31, 2014.
** Excludes sheep and goats residing in the Navajo Nation.
Sheep
Goats
FY 2014 Sheep and Goat State Sampling Minimums and State Collections
District 1
(Table 1)
WV
VT
VA
RI
PA
NY
NJ
NH
NC
ME
MD
MA
DE
CT
Sheep
Sampling Minimum FY
2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Goat Sampling
Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Connecticut 31 84% 5 560%Delaware 5 200% 3 133%
Maine 61 133% 6 233%Maryland 143 45% 14 221%
Massachusetts 67 110% 8 300%New Hampshire 42 202% 4 100%
New Jersey 87 69% 11 36%New York 420 160% 43 1633%
North Carolina 150 236% 83 96%Pennsylvania 580 110% 62 621%Rhode Island 7 100% 1 100%
Vermont 82 133% 7 457%Virginia 560 109% 79 197%
West Virginia 220 167% 27 178%
FY 2014 Sheep and Goat State Sampling Minimums and State Collections
District 2
(Table 2)
TNSC
GA
FL
AL
Sheep
Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Goat Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Alabama 105 171% 49 339%
Florida 77 104% 65 94%
Georgia 70 97% 73 175%
South Carolina 41 146% 50 220%
Tennessee 210 693% 131 145%
FY 2014 Sheep and Goat State Sampling Minimums and State Collections
District 3
(Table 3)
WI
OH
MN
MI
KY
INIL
IA
Sheep
Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Goat Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Illinois 350 373% 158 285%
Indiana 370 528% 46 2024%
Iowa 590 480% 59 332%
Kentucky 270 279% 81 644%
Michigan 430 626% 183 126%
Minnesota 588 356% 43 188%
Ohio 587 504% 451 102%
Wisconsin 530 301% 72 119%
FY 2014 Sheep and Goat State Sampling Minimums and State Collections
District 4
(Table 4)
TX
OK
MS
LA
AR
MO
Sheep
Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Goat Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Arkansas 98 83% 49 520%
Louisiana 52 131% 26 88%
Mississippi 54 113% 34 185%
Missouri 530 132% 103 850%
Oklahoma 440 77% 120 281%
Texas 597 181% 597 51%
FY 2014 Sheep and Goat State Sampling Minimums and State Collections
District 5
(Table 5)
WYSD
NE
NDMT
KS
ID
Sheep
Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Goat Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Idaho 593 146% 20 420%
Kansas 330 116% 42 355%
Montana 593 356% 11 645%
Nebraska 530 93% 22 427%
North Dakota 440 184% 4 325%
South Dakota 594 587% 10 190%
Wyoming 595 236% 6 1033%
WA
UT
OR
NV
NMHI
CO
CA
AZ
AK
FY 2014 Sheep and Goat State Sampling Minimums and State Collections
District 6
(Table 6)
Sheep
Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Goat Sampling Minimum FY 2014
Percent of Minimum Obtained
Alaska 5 60% 1 0%
Arizona 188 21% 18 678%
California 596 181% 589 41%
Colorado 593 218% 286 100%
Hawaii 92 54% 14 43%
Nevada 500 51% 12 725%
New Mexico 264 47% 15 333%
Oregon 591 278% 46 343%
Utah 595 151% 15 347%
Washington 330 155% 218 71%
(Figure 2)
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL
ID
IA
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
CO
CA
AZ
AR
AK
AL≤ 20%
21 - 40%
41 - 60%
61 - 80%
81 - 100%
> 100%
Percent of Sampling Minimum Achievedin FY 2014—RSSS and On-farm Surveillance—Sheep
(Figure 3)
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL
ID
IA
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
CO
CA
AZ
AR
AK
AL≤ 20%
21 - 40%
41 - 60%
61 - 80%
81 - 100%
> 100%
Percent of Sampling Minimum Achievedin FY 2014—RSSS and On-farm Surveillance—Goats
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VI
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PR
PA
OR
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJNE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD
LA
KYKS
INIL
ID
IA
HI
GA
FL
DE CO
CA
AZAR
AK
AL
District One
District Two
District Three
District Four
District Five
District Six
(Figure 4)
RSSS Sample Collections FY 2014177 collection sites in 41 states
v
v
NHMA
CT
States with RSSS collection sites
Total Slaughter Surveillance Samples Collectedby VS District Where Collected
FY 2014
Distric
t 1
Distric
t 2
Distric
t 3
Distric
t 4
Distric
t 5
Distric
t 60
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
(Chart 4)
Distric
t 1
Distric
t 2
Distric
t 3
Distric
t 4
Distric
t 5
Distric
t 60
50010001500200025003000350040004500
Sheep Goats
(Chart 5)
Slaughter Surveillance Samples Collected by MonthFiscal Years 2010 to 2014
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
10* 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
FY 10FY 11FY 12FY 13
FY 14
Month
* Surveillance numbers were significantly lower October 2013 compared to October in prior FYs because the furlough reduced the number of collection days.
28
0
5000
10000
15000
20000
25000
30000
35000
40000
45000
FY '03
FY '05
FY '07
FY '09
FY '11
FY '13
Other Sheep*GoatWhite Face
Mottled <1% BlackMottled >1% BlackBlack Face
* Includes gray, red, and unknown face color; and hair sheep. Chart includes animals collected for RSSS & CSPS. % Black of mottled-faced sheep available since FY 2009
Surveillance Samples Collected at Slaughter FY 2003 – 2014
(Chart 6)
Adjusted to exclude multiple positive animals from same flock. Mottled- and white-faced combined. Does not include Nor98-like scrapie cases found through RSSS (2 in FY 2007, 1 in FY 2008, 4 in FY 2010, 1 in FY 2011).
(Chart 7)
0.0%0.1%0.2%0.3%0.4%0.5%0.6%0.7%0.8%0.9%1.0% % Pos '03
% Pos '04% Pos '05% Pos '06% Pos '07% Pos '08% Pos '09% Pos '10% Pos '11% Pos '12% Pos '13% Pos '14
Percent of RSSS Sheep Samples that Tested Positive for Classical Scrapie - By Face Color - Fiscal Year (2003 – 2014)
0.00%0.02%0.04%0.06%0.08%0.10%0.12%0.14%0.16%0.18%0.20%
% Pos '08% Pos '09% Pos '10% Pos '11% Pos '12% Pos '13% Pos '14
(Chart 8)
Percent of RSSS Samples that TestedPositive for Classical Scrapie by Face Color during each
Fiscal Year (2008 – 2014)
Includes only sheep with test results reported. Includes multiple positives from same flock.
(Chart 9)
Retrospective 6 Month Rolling Average of Percent Classical Scrapie Positive Black-Faced Cull Sheep Sampled at Slaughter
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
Mar
-04
Mar
-05
Mar
-06
Mar
-07
Mar
-08
Mar
-09
Mar
-10
Mar
-11
Mar
-12
Mar
-13
Mar
-14
% Positive
* April – September, 2003
(Chart 10)
0%10%20%30%40%50%60%70%80%90%
100%
Untraceable
Traceable
Average %
Traceable FY03-FY1384%
Investigations of RSSS Positive AnimalsFY 2003* – FY 2014
On-Farm Surveillance Testing by Month and Species - FY 2014
Oct-13
Nov-13
Dec-13
Jan-14
Feb-14
Mar-
14Apr-1
4M
ay-14
Jun-14
Jul-1
4Aug-1
4Se
p-14
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
GoatsSheepTotal
(Chart 11)
Number of Animals Sampled for Scrapie Testing by Quarter - FY 2014
1st Qtr 2nd Qtr 3rd Qtr 4th Qtr0
2,0004,0006,0008,000
10,00012,00014,00016,00018,00020,000
On-Farm Testing*RSSS
(Chart 12)
* Includes all regulatory testing (necropsy and live-animal) and on-farm surveillance.
(Chart 13)
RSSS and On-Farm Surveillance Testingby Species - FY 2014
82%
18%
RSSS
Sheep Goats
73%
27%
On-Farm
Sheep Goats
(Table 7)
Scrapie Confirmed Cases in FY 2014
STATESHEEP GOATS
RSSS On-Farm RSSS On-Farm
IA 0 0 0 7 #
IL 1 0 0 0
NY 0 1 0 0
OH 1 14 0 0
VA 1 1 0 0
Untraceable 2 0 0 0
TOTALALL STATES 5 16 0 7 #
# 3 additional goats from the IA herd later tested positive at a quarantined research facility.
* All goats, associated with a previously-identified infected sheep flock (FY13).# 3 additional goats from the IA herd later tested positive at a quarantined research facility.
1/15
Scrapie Confirmed Cases FY 2014
37
Untraceable: 2
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RIPA
OR
OK
OH1/14
NY1
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL1
ID
IA*7 #
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
COCA
AZ
AR
AK
AL
(Figure 5)
Type of Scrapie
RSSS Field Cases
Total
Classical 5 23 28
(Nor98-like) (0) (0) (0)
Total 5 23 28
VA1/1
WY
WV
WI
WA1
VT
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR
OK
OH5
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI6
ME
MD – 2
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL1
ID
IA*7 #
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
CO3CA
13
AZ1 AR
AK
AL
(Figure 6)
Scrapie Cases in Goats FY 2002 – FY 2014
Type of Scrapie
RSSS Field Cases
Total
Classical 0 39 39
(Nor98-like) (0) (0) (0)
Total 0 39 39
* Most recent herd with a scrapie positive confirmed goat identified in February 2014.# 3 additional goats from the IA herd later tested positive at a quarantined research facility.
Scrapie Infected and Source FlocksFY 2014 Overview
Infected/Source flocks with an open status at the start of FY 2014 9
New Infected/Source flocks in FY 2014 6
Infected/Source flocks released in FY 2014 9
Infected/Source flocks currently with an open status at the end of FY 2014 4
(Table 8)
* Infected status reopened on previously reported infected flock because flock plan was not completed.
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA - 1
OR1
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD - 1
MA
LA
KY - 1KS
INIL2
ID
IA2
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
COCA
AZ1 AR
AK
AL
Open source flocks—8Open infected flocks—1
Scrapie Infected and Source Flocks: Open Statuses as of October 1, 2013
(Figure 7)
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA1
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR
OK
OH1
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL1
ID
IA3
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
COCA
AZ
AR
AK
AL
(Figure 8)
New infected flocks—3New source flocks—3
New Scrapie Infected and Source Flocks - FY 2014
MD
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR1
OK
OH1
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD
MA
LA
KY-1KS
INIL
ID
IA5
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
COCA
AZ1 AR
AK
AL
(Figure 9)
Flocks released—9
Released Scrapie Infected and Source Flocks FY 2014
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA1
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL2
ID
IA
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
CO1*CA
AZ
AR
AK
AL
(Figure 10)
Open source flocks—3Open infected flocks—1
Scrapie Infected and Source Flocks: Open Statuses as of September 30, 2014
MD
* Infected status reopened on previously reported infected flock because flock plan was not completed.
Registered and Club Goats
0.5%
Nonregistered Sheep
87%
Registered and Club Sheep0.2%
Nonregistered Goats12%
Total number of animals indemnified: 643 (560 sheep and 83 goats)
Total amount spent: indemnification and disposal $136,585.03
The average cost: $212 per animal.
(Chart 14)
Indemnity Claims FY 2014
Scrapie Flock Certification Program: Participating Flocks
Total Enrolled Flocks--455• Export Monitored—177• Export Certified—18• Selective Monitored—260
WY6
WV 2
WI20
WA14
VA3
UT4
TX0
TN-11
SD6
SC15
RI-2PA47
OR15
OK4
OH3
NY6
NV1
NM3
NJ-11NE6
ND1
NC-16
MT5
MS12
MO2
MN6
MI8
ME22
MD-2
MA-8
LA7
KY-16KS6
IN31
IL7
ID9
IA6
HI20
GA16
FL 17
DE-0
CT-12
CO1CA
8
AZ1 AR
0
AK1
AL10
VT18
NH-7
(Figure 11)
SFCP Participating Flocks by Fiscal Year - FY 1997 to FY 2014
FY
'98
FY
'00
FY
'02
FY
'04
FY
'06
FY
'08
FY
'10
FY
'12
FY
'14
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
Export CertifiedExport MonitoredSelect MonitoredCertified*Complete Monitored*
46* The Complete Monitored category (including Certified flocks) was discontinued June 10, 2013.
(Chart 15)
(Figure 12)
Percent of Sheep Flocks Reported by NASS (2012 Census Report) Assigned Flock Identification Numbers
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL
ID
IA
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
CO
CA
AZ
AR
AK
AL≤ 20%
21 - 40%
41 - 60%
61 - 80%
81 - 100%
> 100%
(Figure 13)
Percent of Goat Herds Reported by NASS (2012 Census Report) Assigned Flock Identification Numbers
≤ 20%
21 - 40%
41 - 60%
61 - 80%
81 - 100%
> 100%
WY
WV
WI
WA
VT
VA
UT
TX
TN
SD
SC
RI
PA
OR
OK
OH
NY
NV
NM
NJ
NH
NE
ND
NC
MT
MS
MO
MN
MI
ME
MD
MA
LA
KYKS
INIL
ID
IA
HI
GA
FL
DE
CT
CO
CA
AZ
AR
AK
AL
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