Chicago | Reuters—Hurricane Milton caused an estimated $1.5 billion to $2.5 billion (C$2.1 billion to $3.4 billion) in damage to Florida’s crops and agricultural infrastructure, according to a preliminary assessment released by the state’s Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services on Thursday.
The majority of Florida’s citrus producing counties were hit with high winds and flooding, along with areas that raise dairy cattle and produce products like cotton, peanuts, rice, blueberries, strawberries and other tropical fruits, the agency said.
Milton came ashore as a Category 3 hurricane on Oct. 9 and carved a swathe of destruction across 51 counties, 34 of which were declared disaster areas, with widespread flooding and wind damage.
Cows in California are dying at much higher rates from bird flu than in other affected states, industry and veterinary experts said, and some carcasses have been left rotting in the sun as rendering plants struggle to process all the dead animals.
Florida’s citrus sector sustained “significant production losses” and likely long-term impacts, the agency said.
“Most of these losses are due to fruit drop, damage to branches, and impacts from heavy precipitation and flooding. Growers are also reporting heavy infrastructure damage, and there are major concerns of flood-caused tree mortality in the near-future,” it said in the preliminary report based on initial reporting and communication with farmers.
“Minor to catastrophic damages” were expected in cotton, peanut and rice areas.
The state’s dairy and cattle operations were also severely hit with “significant infrastructure damages” while power outages in the storm’s wake disrupted cow milking and production.
More complete damage assessments will be released at more information is gathered, the agency said.
—Reporting for Reuters by Karl Plume and P.J. Huffstutter in Chicago
Source: Farmtario.com