BioSec Bob here on Saturday, April 25, 2026—let’s get right into it.
Starting with a health alert on the poultry side. Food Poison Journal is reporting that antibiotic-resistant Salmonella is being linked to backyard poultry operations. Researchers have identified strains of the bacteria that don’t respond to common antimicrobial treatments, and backyard flocks are showing up as a potential source. That’s worth your attention if you’re anywhere near small-scale producers or residential areas where people keep chickens—the risk of cross-contamination or spread to commercial operations isn’t something to dismiss.
Over in Maryland, there’s a green light for growth. Maryland Matters says the state has lifted a permitting delay that was blocking new chicken house construction, allowing producers to move forward with facility expansion plans. The delay had stalled multiple projects waiting for state approval. With that bottleneck cleared, expect to see renewed building activity across Maryland’s poultry sector in the coming months.
Turning to swine disease surveillance. National Hog Farmer is reporting that researchers are actively studying Influenza D in pig populations to determine whether the virus poses a spillover risk to humans. The work involves monitoring herds and analyzing viral characteristics that could enable human transmission. It’s ongoing research, not an outbreak situation, but it’s the kind of preventive surveillance work that matters down the line.
On the international front, Pork Business is reporting that a Russian firm has shut down pig farming operations near the Ukraine border due to escalating attack risks in the region. Production facilities in that area have been deemed too dangerous to operate, forcing the company to consolidate operations elsewhere. That’s a significant disruption to Russia’s swine production footprint and another reminder of how geopolitical volatility ripples through global protein supply chains.
Across Eastern Europe, Poland’s poultry industry is reeling. Poultry World says bird flu outbreaks have hit egg production hard and are already affecting export volumes. Multiple facilities have been depopulated, and the country’s ability to supply both domestic and international markets is being squeezed as the disease spreads through active flocks.
Finally, a legal decision on the swine inspection front. Meatingplace reports that a court has ruled that animal advocacy groups lack legal standing to pursue a case challenging current swine inspection procedures. The decision narrows the avenue for that particular legal challenge, though it doesn’t settle the underlying inspection questions themselves.
Lot moving on both sides of the barn—stay alert to what’s developing.