Established in 1908, the Aquebogue site is the last commercial duck farm on Long Island, once world-renowned for its ducks.
Despite the havoc it is wreaking on the farm, health officials say the risk of the public getting sick is minimal.
A New York region once synonymous in the culinary world for duck may lose its last commercial farm. Crescent Duck Farm on ...
Crescent Duck Farm in Aquebogue will have to euthanize every bird at the facility after H5N1 bird flu was confirmed in the ...
An outbreak of avian influenza at Crescent Duck Farm in Aquebogue has forced the farm to cease operations and begin to ...
The owner of the Crescent Duck Farm in Aquebogue, N.Y., has been forced to euthanize its flock of more than 100,000 ducks due ...
The highly infectious H5N1 strain has caused outbreaks across the country. Now, Long Island’s last duck farm must kill its ...
A major bird flu outbreak has hit a Suffolk County poultry farm. Dozens of state and federal agricultural workers dressed in ...
The animals were a part of the Crescent Duck Farm in Aquebogue, Long Island — one of the last duck farms in the area — which ceased operations due to the outbreak that was confirmed on Jan. 17 ...
The Suffolk County health department announced that Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza, bird flu, was detected in a commerical ...
Crescent Duck Farm, the century-old producer of the iconic Long Island duck, is battling to survive after a bird flu outbreak ...
He said the family will have to reckon with the future of the fourth-generation business, which was established in 1908 and is tucked among the vineyards and agricultural lands of Long Island’s ...