After Hurricane Matthew, livestock farms in North Carolina are still underwater

Hurricane Matthew continues to blow. Coverage of Hurricane Matthew’s record-breaking East Coast jaunt was largely drowned out by last week’s presidential debate and that resulting shit storm, but Civil Eats reminded us this morning that a lot of North Carolina is still very much underwater.

Christina Cooke reports that an estimated 1,300 hogs and anywhere between 2 and 5 million birds (or more) housed in the state’s Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) have already drowned in the flooding.

Ribbons of the lagoons’ trademark bright pink color have made their way into the adjacent Neuse River.

Beyond loss of livestock, the flooding has serious environmental implications. CAFOs dispose of hog waste in nearby lagoons, and those ammonia and nitrate-rich, fecal bacteria-breeding waste repositories are vulnerable to flooding. Cooke spoke with Waterkeeper Alliance founder and advisor Rick Dove, who says he flew over some of the lagoons this week and saw evidence that the waste is leaking into surrounding bodies of water.

How could he tell? Ribbons of the lagoons’ trademark bright pink color have made their way into the adjacent Neuse River, while some of the (formerly pink) lagoons have taken on the color of the surrounding floodwaters. Cooke reports that Waterkeeper plans to release photographic evidence of the seepage in the coming days.

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H. Claire Brown is a senior staff writer for The Counter. Her work has also appeared in The Atlantic, The Guardian, and The Intercept and has won awards from the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing, the New York Press Club, the Newswomen's Club of New York, and others. A North Carolina native, she now lives in Brooklyn.