Animal activists' efforts to free minks and cripple a facet of the fur industry this week hit Minnesota, the nation's fifth-largest mink producer.
Hundreds of mink were set loose from a southeastern Minnesota ranch this week, just days after Wisconsin fur farm owners scrambled to catch their own mink with fishing nets following a similar action they called "devastating."
The four-generation Myhre ranch east of Grand Meadow, Minn., was targeted late Sunday or early Monday. Workers, friends and fellow farmers helped retrieve the 450 or so mink, owner Einar Myhre said.
By Tuesday, dozens were still missing.
"Very few of them will survive in the wild because they've never been taught," he said. "We just picked up a dead one on the road this morning that got hit."
Myhre is expecting difficulties with some of the mink that have been retrieved because "when they have been on the ground and been in the creek, they'll get sick and we'll lose them."
Mower County Sheriff Terese Amazi said Tuesday that investigators believe "at least two people" released the mink and are responsible for burglary and property damage. No arrests have been made, Amazi said.
Each mink is worth about $100, the sheriff said, so "it's a substantial loss."