USDA's Detector Dogs: Protecting American Agriculture
The AQI Program at Airports

A picture of beagles within a dog bone shape.

Many agricultural products are prohibited entry because they can contain foreign animal and plant pests and diseases that could damage U.S. agriculture.

Many agricultural products are prohibited entry because they can contain foreign animal and plant pests and diseases that could damage U.S. agriculture.

Many agricultural products are prohibited entry because they can contain foreign animal and plant pests and diseases that could damage U.S. agriculture.

Recent increases in international travel pose more

APHIS PPQ officers make about 2 million interceptions of illegal agricultural products every year. Included in that total are more than 295,000 lots of unauthorized meat and animal byproducts that have the potential to carry diseases to American livestock and poultry. Inspectors also find nearly 104,000 plant pests and diseases that could have been dangerous to our agricultural industry. The Beagle Brigade program averages around 75,000 seizures of prohibited agricultural products a year.

Some of the busiest FIS areas are at major international airports in large U.S. cities like New York, Miami, Dallas, and Los Angeles, and it is in airports such as these that the Beagle Brigade usually works. In the FIS area, APHIS officers work alongside officers from the U.S. Customs Service (Customs), the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Public Health Service, and the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). All these Federal agencies have various missions and work together to protect people by enforcing laws and facilitating the entry of passengers and goods.

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