June 22, 2022

Thousands of cattle died in mid-June in Kansas — deaths that state officials and animal experts have said were caused by intense heat.

But some social media posts are casting doubt on this explanation.

“They did not die of extreme heat,” one Instagram post said. “This is not normal.”

A Facebook post seemed to tie the deaths to other recent unfounded claims that fires at food processing plants are part of a scheme to cause food shortages.

“10K dead cattle in Kansas,” the post said. “Cause of death they said.. Heat stroke!! We know who did it. More meat shortages to come & the price for beef just skyrocketed.”

Another said the cows were “KILLED FROM ABOVE!!!”

“No one seems to want to say this but… those ‘chem-trails’ took out these cattle INTENTIONALLY!!!”

These posts were flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

There’s no evidence to support claims that supposed chemtrails killed these cattle. So-called “chemtrails” are not real, according to atmospheric chemists and geochemists, but conspiracy theorists have used the term to describe the condensation trails that airplanes create, suggesting that they show planes are spraying the earth with chemicals. In fact, these plumes are formed by the combination of high humidity and low temperatures.

Nor is there evidence that the cattle deaths were orchestrated to cause a food shortage. And claims that heat is not to blame are also wrong.

The Kansas Department of Health and Environment has said that at least 2,000 cattle died due to high temperatures and humidity, Reuters reported. The death toll was based on requests the state agency received to help dispose of the cow carcasses.

Scarlett Hagins, a spokesperson for the Kansas Livestock Association, told the news outlet that cattle started to suffer heat stress as temperatures soared from the high 70s to 108 degrees and humidity spiked and winds died down. The cows couldn’t acclimate to the sudden change; the overnight temperatures did not enable them the time their bodies needed to cool down.

Dr. Nels Lindberg, a veterinarian who works with feedlots in Kansas, told a CBS News affiliate in the state that the cattle deaths are the result of a natural disaster.

“Sometimes the conditions get so extreme, it doesn’t matter how hard producers prepare the environment, the operation, the animals,” Lindberg said.

We rate these posts False.

This fact check was originally published by PolitiFact, which is part of the Poynter Institute. It is republished here with permission. See the sources here and more of their fact checks here.

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Ciara O'Rourke is a contributing writer for PolitiFact. Previously, Ciara covered local government and public safety for the Austin American-Statesman and fact-checked elected officials and…
Ciara O'Rourke

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  • Oh I see, this is a fact checker. Then my comment will never go through. As you are in charge of keeping the narrative in place. I see. Sad.