Interesting, but, if the goal is to isolate the cause of chickens not laying eggs, it's irresponsible to publish this article with no conclusion. The biggest TLDR?
Again, none of these numbers would be considered unsafe by US food regulators. As a food scientist, it seems doubtful to me that 2.9 ppb of aflatoxins could be responsible for chickens not laying eggs. However, I’m not an avian biologist, so I can’t answer that question with certainty. It just seems unlikely to me that this could cause chickens to stop laying eggs.
They need to show the journalistic tenacity to pursue this and ultimately nail down a cause, otherwise, this is just a fart in the wind. The absence of them nailing down the DS "deep food" players connected to these feeds, as well as anecdotal evidence that there's one feed in particular that causes this, makes this really weak stuff.
Yep. About 5% of lot #'s (1 in 20) are the cause of most of the deaths / hospitalizations. It's tuned in and consistently spaced out to be anything other than design.
TLDR: They didn't find anything.
Interesting, but, if the goal is to isolate the cause of chickens not laying eggs, it's irresponsible to publish this article with no conclusion. The biggest TLDR?
They need to show the journalistic tenacity to pursue this and ultimately nail down a cause, otherwise, this is just a fart in the wind. The absence of them nailing down the DS "deep food" players connected to these feeds, as well as anecdotal evidence that there's one feed in particular that causes this, makes this really weak stuff.
They should solicit samples from the people whos chickens stopped laying.
Exactly!
Just like the shots. Batches vary.
Yep. About 5% of lot #'s (1 in 20) are the cause of most of the deaths / hospitalizations. It's tuned in and consistently spaced out to be anything other than design.