An especially severe outbreak of a highly contagious equine virus has led to voluntary quarantines and elaborate precautions to protect horses in Minnesota and surrounding states.
Nowhere are the restrictions more visible than at this year's Minnesota Horse Expo, a popular event now in its 32nd year that runs Friday through Sunday at the Minnesota State Fairgrounds.
Only 50 horses will be present this year at the expo, down from 300 in recent years, expo President Glen Eaton said. But organizers say there will still be plenty of entertainment, and they hope to draw the usual 45,000 human visitors.
Cases of equine herpes virus-1 (EHV-1) crop up every fall and spring, said Dr. Paul Anderson, assistant director of the Minnesota Board of Animal Health. But this year has seen an unusually high number of cases reporting neurological symptoms, which can be deadly.
"We're concerned about what's happening here," Anderson said.
In Minnesota, where the ailment has been most prevalent, seven horses have tested positive for the virus, two of which had to be euthanized, Anderson said. The other five are recovering.
The last reported case in Minnesota was on March 29 in Wright County, according to the Animal Health Board.
In Wisconsin, the most recent of two confirmed cases of the virus was reported on April 8. One case has been reported in Iowa.