,
Wales, 1872
United States (1870–1929) The US has had nine FMD outbreaks since it was first recognized on the northeastern coast in 1870; the most devastating happened in 1914. It originated from
Michigan, but its entry into the stockyards in Chicago turned it into an
epizootic. About 3,500 livestock herds were infected across the US, totaling over 170,000 cattle, sheep, and swine. The eradication came at a cost of US$4.5 million (equivalent to $ million in ). A 1924 outbreak in California resulted not only in the slaughter of 109,000 farm animals, but also 22,000
deer. The US had its latest FMD outbreak in
Montebello, California, in 1929. This outbreak originated in hogs that had eaten infected meat scraps from a tourist steamship that had stocked meat in Argentina. Over 3,600 animals were slaughtered and the disease was contained in less than a month.
Mexico–U.S. border (1947) {{external media On 26 December 1946, the United States and Mexico jointly declared that FMD had been found in Mexico. Initially, proposals from Texans were for an animal-proof wall, to prevent animals from crossing the border and spreading the disease, but the two countries eventually managed to cooperate in a bilateral effort and eradicated the disease without building a wall. To prevent tension between ranchers and the veterinarians, public broadcasts over the radio and with speakers on trucks were used to inform Mexican ranchers why the U.S. veterinarians were working on their livestock. Ranchers who lost cattle due to being culled by the vets would receive financial compensation. However, the tension remained and resulted in clashes between local citizens and the military-protected U.S. veterinarians. These teams of veterinarians worked from outside the infection zone of the disease and worked their way to the heart of the epidemic. Over 60,000,000 injections were administered to livestock by the end of 1950.
United Kingdom (1967) In October 1967, a farmer in
Shropshire reported a lame sow, which was later diagnosed with FMD. The source was believed to be remains of legally imported infected lamb from Argentina and Chile. The virus spread, and in total, 442,000 animals were slaughtered and the outbreak had an estimated cost of £370 million (equivalent to £ billion in ).
Taiwan (1997) Taiwan had previous epidemics of FMD in 1913–14 and 1924–29, but had since been spared, and considered itself free of FMD as late as in the 1990s. On 19 March 1997, a sow at a farm in
Hsinchu,
Taiwan, was diagnosed with a strain of FMD that only infects swine. Mortality was high, nearing 100% in the infected herd. The cause of the epidemic was not determined, but the farm was near a port city known for its pig-smuggling industry and illegal slaughterhouses. Smuggled swine or contaminated meat are thus likely sources of the disease. The disease spread rapidly among swine herds in Taiwan, with 200–300 new farms being infected daily. Causes for this include the high swine density in the area, with up to 6,500 hogs per square mile, feeding of pigs with untreated garbage, and the farms' proximity to slaughterhouses. Other systemic issues, such as lack of laboratory facilities, slow response, and initial lack of a vaccination program, contributed. A complicating factor is the endemic spread of
swine vesicular disease (SVD) in Taiwan. The symptoms are indistinguishable from FMD, which may have led to previous misdiagnosing of FMD as SVD. Laboratory analysis was seldom used for diagnosis, and FMD may thus have gone unnoticed for some time. The swine depopulation was a massive undertaking, with the military contributing substantial manpower. At peak capacity, 200,000 hogs per day were disposed of, mainly by
electrocution. Carcasses were disposed of by burning and burial, but burning was avoided in water resource-protection areas. In April, industrial incinerators were running around the clock to dispose of the carcasses. Initially, 40,000 combined vaccine doses for the strains O-1, A-24, and Asia-1 were available and administered to zoo animals and valuable breeding hogs. At the end of March, half a million new doses for O-1 and Asia-1 were made available. On 3 May 13 million doses of O-1 vaccine arrived, and both the March and May shipments were distributed free of charge. With a danger of vaccination crews spreading the disease, only trained farmers were allowed to administer the vaccine under veterinary supervision. Taiwan had previously been the major exporter of pork to Japan, and among the top 15 pork producers in the world in 1996. During the outbreak, over 3.8 million swine were destroyed at a cost of US$6.9 billion (equivalent to $ billion in ). The Taiwanese pig industry was devastated as a result, and the export market was in ruins. In 2007, Taiwan was considered free of FMD, but was still conducting a vaccination program, which restricts the export of meat from Taiwan.
United Kingdom (2001) The epidemic of FMD in the
United Kingdom in the spring and summer of 2001 was caused by the "Type O pan Asia" strain of the disease. This episode resulted in more than 2,000 cases of the disease in farms throughout the British countryside. More than six million sheep and cattle were killed in an eventually successful attempt to halt the disease. to the agricultural and support industries, and to the outdoor industry. What made this outbreak so serious was the amount of time between infection being present at the first outbreak locus, and when countermeasures were put into operation against the disease, such as transport bans and detergent washing of both vehicles and personnel entering livestock areas. The epidemic was probably caused by pigs that had been fed infected rubbish that had not been properly heat-sterilized. Further, the rubbish is believed to have contained remains of infected meat that had been illegally imported to Britain.
China (2005) In April 2005, an Asia-1 strain of FMD appeared in the eastern provinces of
Shandong and
Jiangsu. During April and May, it spread to suburban Beijing, the northern province of
Hebei, and the
Xinjiang autonomous region in
northwest China. On 13 May, China reported the FMD outbreak to the
World Health Organization and the OIE. This was the first time China has publicly admitted to having FMD. China is still reporting FMD outbreaks. In 2007, reports filed with the OIE documented new or ongoing outbreaks in the provinces of
Gansu,
Qinghai and
Xinjiang. FMD is endemic in pastoral regions of China from Heilongjiang Province in the northeast to Sichuan Province and the Tibetan Autonomous region in the southwest. Chinese domestic media reports often use a euphemism "Disease Number Five" (五号病
wǔhàobìng) rather than FMD in reports because of the sensitivity of the FMD issue. In March 2010,
Southern Rural News (
Nanfang Nongcunbao), in an article "Breaking the Hoof and Mouth Disease Taboo", noted that FMD has long been covered up in China by referring to it that way. FMD is also called canker (口疮, literally "mouth ulcers"
kǒuchuāng) or hoof jaundice (蹄癀
tíhuáng) in China, so information on FMD in China can be found online using those words as search terms. One can find online many provincial orders and regulations on FMD control antedating China's acknowledgment that the disease existed in China, for example Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region 1991 regulation on preventing the spread of Disease No.5.
United Kingdom (2007) An infection of FMD in the United Kingdom was confirmed by the
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, on 3 August 2007, on farmland located in
Normandy, Surrey. All livestock in the vicinity were culled on 4 August. A nationwide ban on the movement of cattle and pigs was imposed, with a 3-km (1.9-mi) protection zone placed around the outbreak sites and the nearby virus research and vaccine production establishments, together with a 10-km (6.2-mi) increased surveillance zone. On 4 August, the strain of the virus was identified as a "01 BFS67-like" virus, one linked to vaccines and not normally found in animals, and isolated in the 1967 outbreak. The same strain was used at the nearby
Institute for Animal Health and
Merial Animal Health Ltd at
Pirbright, away, which is an American/French-owned BSL-4 vaccine manufacturing facility, and was identified as the likely source of infection. On 12 September, a new outbreak of the disease was confirmed in
Egham,
Surrey, from the original outbreak, with a second case being confirmed on a nearby farm on 14 September. These outbreaks caused a cull of all at-risk animals in the area surrounding Egham, including two farms near the famous four-star hotel
Great Fosters. These outbreaks also caused the closure of
Windsor Great Park due to the park containing deer; the park remained closed for three months. On 19 September 2007, a suspected case of FMD was found in
Solihull, where a temporary control zone was set up by
Defra.
Japan and Korea (2010–2011) In April 2010, a report of three incursions of FMD in
Japan and
South Korea led the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to issue a call for increased global surveillance. Japan veterinary authorities confirmed an outbreak of type O FMD virus, currently more common in Asian countries where FMD is endemic. South Korea was hit by the rarer type A FMD in January, and then the type O infection in April. The most serious case of foot-and-mouth outbreak in South Korea's history started in November 2010 in pig farms in
Andong city of
Gyeongsangbuk-do, and has since spread in the country rapidly. More than 100 cases of the disease have been confirmed in the country so far, On 10 February 2011,
North Korea reported an outbreak affecting pigs in the region around
Pyongyang, by then ongoing since at least December 2010. Efforts to control the outbreak were hampered by illicit sales of infected meat.
Indonesia (2022) After being eradicated there in 1986, FMD was again detected in
Indonesia in May 2022. The
Australian government has offered its assistance but remains unconcerned, considering the
risk to the country's biosecurity to be low. The
Department of Agriculture (DAWE) is the responsible body and has been monitoring the situation. DAWE has determined there is only a low risk and has stockpiled
vaccines since 2004 anyhow. In response to the Indonesian outbreak, Australian authorities began checking parcels and baggage from Indonesia and China. Disinfectant floormats were also installed at Australian airports to clean footwear. The
Albanese Government rejected calls by opposition parties to close the border to travel from Indonesia. In addition, New Zealand authorities have banned travellers from Indonesia from bringing meat products, have screened baggage from Indonesia, and installed floor mats. New Zealand Prime Minister
Jacinda Ardern and Biosecurity Minister
Damien O'Connor have expressed concern about the impact of foot and mouth disease on New Zealand's substantial cattle, sheep and pig populations as well as wildlife.
Germany (2025) In January 2025, an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease was reported in a herd of water buffalo near Berlin. A 3 kilometre exclusion zone and a 10 kilometre monitoring zone were imposed, and after four days no further cases had been detected within 1 kilometre of the original case.
Hungary and Slovakia (2025) On 8 March 2025, a confirmed case of foot-and-mouth disease was reported at a cattle farm in
Kisbajcs, located in the northwestern corner of
Hungary, the first such case in 50 years. Immediate counter-measures were made to mitigate the spread of the disease, including the liquidation of all 1400 animals in the affected herd and the burial of their carcasses. The government of the United Kingdom subsequently banned all imports of cattle, sheep, pigs and deer, as well as banning travellers from bringing meat and dairy products with them, from both Hungary and neighbouring
Slovakia due to the farm's proximity to the country's border. As of 10 March 2025, the eradication of the disease was still in progress. On 21 March 2025, the foot-and-mouth disease was confirmed to cross the Hungarian-Slovak border with three cattle farms in villages
Medveďov,
Ňárad and
Baka in
Dunajská Streda district having the cases of the disease. The Fourth Slovak farm with infected cattle confirmed was in village
Lúč na Ostrove on 25 March, with another source of the disease confirmed in Hungarian village
Levél on 26 March. A Fifth infected farm in Slovakia was confirmed on 30 March in
Plavecký Štvrtok. Both countries started with strict border controls, including stopping of traffic on several border crossings. All Slovak zoological gardens were closed temporarily.
South Africa (2025) There has been an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in South Africa since the beginning of 2025. With up to eight of the country's nine provinces affected, with
KwaZulu-Natal being the most severely affected. There is an ongoing vaccination program to try end the outbreak. ==History==