2017
DOI: 10.14202/ijoh.2017.50-56
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Aboveground burial for managing catastrophic losses of livestock

Abstract: Background and Aim: Environmental impacts from carcass management are a significant concern globally. Despite a history of costly, ineffective, and environmentally damaging carcass disposal efforts, large animal carcass disposal methods have advanced little in the past decade. An outbreak today will likely be managed with the same carcass disposal techniques used in the previous decades and will likely result in the same economic, health, and environmental impacts. This article overviews the results of one fie… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The newly developed above‐ground burial (AGB) technique, also knwon as large scale shallow burial with carbon, emerges as an attractive alternative for carcass management (Miller & Flory, 2018 ). The method involves placing the animal carcasses in shallow trenches, over a layer of organic compost, such as wood shavings, and covering the carcasses with a thin layer of soil (Flory et al., 2017 ). The superficial burial method allows for the effective aerobic decomposition of the tissues by the active microbiome found in the soil's upper layers (Flory et al., 2017 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The newly developed above‐ground burial (AGB) technique, also knwon as large scale shallow burial with carbon, emerges as an attractive alternative for carcass management (Miller & Flory, 2018 ). The method involves placing the animal carcasses in shallow trenches, over a layer of organic compost, such as wood shavings, and covering the carcasses with a thin layer of soil (Flory et al., 2017 ). The superficial burial method allows for the effective aerobic decomposition of the tissues by the active microbiome found in the soil's upper layers (Flory et al., 2017 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The method involves placing the animal carcasses in shallow trenches, over a layer of organic compost, such as wood shavings, and covering the carcasses with a thin layer of soil (Flory et al., 2017 ). The superficial burial method allows for the effective aerobic decomposition of the tissues by the active microbiome found in the soil's upper layers (Flory et al., 2017 ). The technique also has the potential to solve some of the logistical, practical, and environmental problems associated with other carcass management options (Flory et al., 2017 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This unclassified spread over short distances has at times been labelled under the heading "local spread" due to a lack of resources to investigate every infectious event. Failure to have sufficient sites available to bury infected animals resulted in disease spread in Japan which delayed eradication efforts (Flory et al, 2017;Hayama et al, 2012;Muroga et al, 2013).…”
Section: Test and Cullmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This unclassified spread over short distances has at times been labelled under the heading “local spread” due to a lack of resources to investigate every infectious event. Failure to have sufficient sites available to bury infected animals resulted in disease spread in Japan which delayed eradication efforts (Flory et al., 2017; Hayama et al., 2012; Muroga et al., 2013). Aside from immediate impact on disease spread, insufficient planning for associated disposal activities has numerous impacts that may extend many years after the end of an outbreak and can include economic losses, groundwater contamination and air pollution from burial sites (Gwyther et al., 2011; Hseu & Chen, 2017; Joung et al., 2013; Kim and Kim, 2012).…”
Section: Response Activities During An Acute Response In a Disease‐free Countrymentioning
confidence: 99%