Today’s quick hits, August 9, 2018

Outbreaks continue (CNN): There are at least six ongoing outbreaks of foodborne illness right now. Affected foods include turkey, pasta salad, vegetable trays, and McDonald’s salads.

SNAP retailer figures still private (Argus Leader): The Food Marketing Institute continues to argue that data on where SNAP dollars are spent should not be released to the public, this time in an emergency appeal to Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch.

EPA’s Wheeler to visit Iowa (Radio Iowa): Gov. Kim Reynolds says she will press acting EPA administrator Andrew Wheeler to approve the year-round sale of E15 fuel when Wheeler visits the Iowa State Fair on Monday.

War on pests hurts owls (PBS): The pint-sized burrowing owl nests in tunnels dug by prairie dogs, marmots, ground squirrels, and badgers, so when those mammals are hunted as pests, there is a companion decline in the population of burrowing owls.

Reducing sunlight won’t save crops (University of California): The geo-engineering idea of injecting particles into the atmosphere to shade and cool the Earth won’t pay off for food production, say researchers, since the particles would reduce the amount of sunlight plants need to produce food.

Who will buy the almonds? (China Daily): California grows four out of every five almonds in the world, and with a record crop forecast for this year, growers are worried about steep tariffs on exports to countries such as China.

Invasive tick spreads (Drovers): The invasive Asian longhorned tick, a livestock pest, was first confirmed in the United States in 2017, in New Jersey. It’s now been found throughout the mid-Atlantic region — Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and North Carolina — as well as in Arkansas and New York State.

Saudi Arabia says no to Canadian grains (Reuters): As a diplomatic dispute escalates, Saudi Arabia, through its main wheat-buying agency, said it will no longer buy wheat or barley from Canada; the kingdom is a small market for Canadian grain exports.

Hog disease in China fuels U.S. fears (Harvest Public Media): The discovery of African swine fever, a deadly viral disease, has been confirmed in China, home to half of the hogs in the world. An Iowa State University professor says the virus is one of the biggest foreign disease threats to U.S. farms.

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