Holding Optimism: It will take science and cooperation to keep the New World screwworm out

“It never should be underestimated how important science is to agriculture.”

USDA will slowly reopen the southern border for livestock trade despite New World screwworm concerns.

Ag Secretary Brooke Rollins has expressed optimism with the pest’s containment.

Congressman Frank Lucas of Oklahoma says that he was encouraged by USDA’s actions to increase sterile fly production.

“The department is trying under emergency authority, and we’ll back them up in any way we can in Congress to as quick as possible, get the production up and get these things under control. We need to keep them out of the United States until after the hard frost this fall, and by spring, hopefully, we’ll have the volume of production we need to suppress them back to the Panama Canal again. This is one of those things where we have paid for decades and decades— the United States has to produce these flies and dump them out. We depend on our neighbors to monitor and cooperate with us, but it has saved us untold amounts of money by paying for the fly program to keep them out of not just us, but our neighbors and everybody back to the Panama Canal.”

Congressman Lucas expressed the need for urgency in addressing the issue and said that using science will be key.

“It never should be underestimated how important science is to agriculture. It’s not just the screwworm eradication program in the United States in the 60s and 70s, but to think about the boweavil eradication program that’s worked so successfully. Think about the brucellosis eradication program. Using science over the course of your lifetime and mine, we have made the supply dramatically safer and more dependable, and the livelihood of our fellow citizens more stable, using these techniques. We just need to make sure our neighbors continue to work with us to follow through.”

Lucas is a fifth-generation Oklahoman whose family has farmed there for more than 120 years. He says that his father and grandfather faced challenges fighting the pest decades ago. He said it devastated not only livestock but wildlife too.

Related Stories
Analysts warn the closed U.S.-Mexico border is straining cattle supplies and packing capacity. StoneX and USDA data point to long-term industry shifts.
Cotton jassid, a invasive pest, is raising concerns for Southeast cotton growers as experts work to understand its impact this season.
Border closures tied to the threat of New World Screwworm continue to stall Mexican fed cattle imports, tightening U.S. feeder cattle supplies over time — triggering feedlot closures that hinder herd rebuilding efforts, threaten the beef supply chain, and shrink production while consumer prices stay elevated.
President Donald Trump signed an executive order this week to accelerate domestic production of phosphorus and glyphosate, signaling that farm input availability is now treated as a national security risk.
Livestock Conservancy Senior Program Manager Jeannette Beranger explains the upcoming poultry census and ongoing efforts to preserve rare and heritage poultry breeds raised across the U.S.
Texas Ag Commissioner Sid Miller joins us to discuss the cattle herd rebuild, trade concerns, and how ranchers would define “America First” policy priorities.

Agriculture Shows
From barnyards and back roads to metros and highways, Simply Southern TV on RFD Network explores all of Alabama to bring you the best stories on farming, gardening, forestry, rural living, and youth in agriculture.
In the first week of each month, “Down Home Virginia,” produced by the Virginia Farm Bureau, airs its half-hour program. Other states’ Farm Bureaus featured on different weeks include Texas, Arkansas, Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee, Idaho, and New York, and news from the American Farm Bureau from Washington, D.C.
Created by former Louisiana Farm Bureau PR Director and former host Regnal Wallace, “This Week in Louisiana Agriculture,” is one of the state’s longest-running TV programs.
From the rapid technological advances in the business of farming to the policy that helps shape the industry, growers get unparalleled perspective from these guys. Max Armstrong, Mike Pearson and Greg Soulje: the names producers have long known and trusted for agriculture news, weather, and commentary.