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USDA confirms that three more cases of screwworm have been confirmed in the United States

The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed three additional cases?of New World?screwworm, including two in Texas. Department of Agriculture confirmed Monday three more cases of New World Screwworm, two of which were in Texas.

The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service reported that the two Texas cases involved a calf from La Salle County and an adult goat from Gillespie County.

APHIS clarified a fifth case that was reported earlier on Monday, involving a dog from Andrews County. The case will be reclassified to 'the first case detected in New Mexico. The agency stated that the veterinarian who reported the incident is located in Texas. However, the dog resides in Lea County in New Mexico, which borders Texas.

In a press release, Dudley Hoskins stated that "this situation is evolving and we expect new information will?emerge? as our investigation continues."

New World screwworm can infect any warm-blooded creature, including livestock and pets. It is also known to infest people in rare instances. The larvae burrow into living tissue, causing serious wounds and suffering to animals.

The USDA confirmed a second case of the flesh-eating parasite in Texas on Friday, just a few miles away from the site where the first U.S. discovery in decades occurred last week.

Reports?last year indicated that hundreds of veterinarians, lab workers, and support staff at the USDA's animal health division had left because the Trump administration had pushed for resignations. This meant that there were fewer specialists available to respond to animal disease outbreaks. Reporting by Anushree mukherjee in Bengaluru, Anjana Anil and Leah Douglas at Washington, and editing by Louise Heavens & Aurora Ellis

(source: Reuters)