Veterinarski Glasnik (Jan 2012)

Biosecurity and mastitis in intensive dairy production

  • Boboš Stanko,
  • Rašić Zoran,
  • Radinović Miodrag,
  • Mašić Zoran,
  • Pajić Marija,
  • Galfi Annamaria,
  • Bošković Milica

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/VETGL1206417B
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 66, no. 5-6
pp. 417 – 425

Abstract

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Newly purchased animals that enter a herd with high milk production can be infected with pathogens of the mammary gland and are a potential risk of infection to the cows on the farm. This risk cannot be avoided entirely, but it can be minimized by taking biosecurity measures that should be written as a policy developed for biosecurity oversight of veterinary service: when older cows are purchased, they should be bought with complete lactations and SCC records, and bacterial examination of milk from the udder quarters must be negative for pathogens of the udder; newly purchased cows should come from herds in which the geometric mean somatic cell count is less than 200,000. The herd must have individual cow SCC recorded at least bimonthly for the previous 6 months; the herd must not have had any history of Strep. agalactiae infection in the last 2 years, the herd should be BVDV-free or vaccinated, and the herd owner must be honest and willing to provide all this information. Our country has accepted the standards for milk quality and hygienic properties that comply with EU standards. The proposed biosafety measures presented in this paper enable the determination of the health status of the herd and the biosecurity level of mastitis in commercial farming in intensive dairy production. [Projekat Ministarstva nauke Republike Srbije, br. TR-31034]

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