BSE cow born on Alberta farm, says Canadian Cattlemen's Association - Action News
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BSE cow born on Alberta farm, says Canadian Cattlemen's Association

The Canadian Cattlemen's Association says a beef breeding cow found with mad cow disease on an Alberta farm was born in the province at a different farm.

Mandatory cattle identification tag on cow's ear traced animal back to birth farm

A case of mad cow disease was confirmed earlier this month in a beef cow from Alberta. The Canadian Cattlemen's Association says the animal was born on a farm in the province. (Jeff McIntosh/Canadian Press)

The Canadian Cattlemen's Association says a beef breeding cow found with mad cow disease on an Alberta farm was born in the province at a different farm.

Association spokesman John Masswohl says the Canadian Food Inspection Agency identified the birth farm.

"They've got the birth farm, which is important," Masswohl said Tuesday. "I understand that everything is in Alberta."

The food agency has not told the beef industry when the cow was born or how many other animals from the same herd may have consumed the same feed in their first year of life, he said.

Officials at the federal food safety watchdog could not immediately be reached for comment.

Masswohl said the CFIA gleaned the information from a cattle identification tag that producers are required to attach to a cow's ear. The details are stored in a database run by the non-profit Canadian Cattle Identification Agency.

"The CFIA has the right by regulation to access the CCIA databases to help in their investigation," Masswohl said.

"That tag was in there, which enabled them to get back to the birth farm, and will also allow them to identify other animals from that same farm."

ID tags mandatory since 2009

Alberta Agriculture said including a cow's date of birth on radio frequency information tags has been mandatory in the province since Jan. 1, 2009. It was voluntary before then.

The federal government has been bolstering the tag identification system since an outbreak of bovine spongiform encephalopathy in 2003 that devastated Canada's beef industry.

About 40 markets immediately closed their borders to Canadian cattle and beef products. Most of those markets have since reopened.

The tags are designed to help contain and eradicate animal disease by making it easier to trace individual livestock animals from birth to death.

The discovery of the BSE cow earlier this month prompted South Korea to suspend imports of Canadian beef.

Last year, Canadian producers sold $25.8 million worth of beef products to South Korea out of total beef exports of $1.9 billion.

Masswohl said the cattle industry hopes the trace investigation will be quick.

"The protocol that we have with South Korea entitles them to suspend their import clearances until Canada provides them with the information to assure them that our beef is safe.

"We are confident that Canada can provide that assurance."