Environmental mastitis in intensive high-producing dairy herds in New South Wales
- PMID: 19930160
- DOI: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2009.00523.x
Environmental mastitis in intensive high-producing dairy herds in New South Wales
Abstract
Objective: To determine the prevalence of mastitis pathogens in high-producing intensive dairy herds in New South Wales.
Design: Field survey.
Procedure: Milk samples from the mastitis-affected quarter were collected from cows on five high-producing dairy farms in NSW. The 820 samples were cultured using standard microbiological culture techniques.
Results: Bacteria or fungi were isolated from 83.3% of samples (683/820). More than two colony types were isolated from 16.7% of samples (137/820), two types from 6.6% (54/820), and one type from 52.3% (429/820). No bacteria were isolated from 24.4% (200/820) of the primary cultures, but enrichment cultures of these samples yielded single colony type bacterial isolates from 36.5% (73/200) of samples. Environmental pathogens, including coliforms, environmental Streptococcus and Staphylococcus spp., made up 91% (555/610) of isolates and accounted for 33.6% (205/610), 41.6% (254/610) and 15.7% (96/610), respectively, of isolates. Escherichia coli accounted for 76.1% (156/205) of the coliform isolates, Streptococcus uberis and Streptococcus dysgalactiae accounted for 32.3% (82/254) and 28.0% (71/254), respectively, of the environmental streptococcal isolates. Contagious pathogens were uncommon, comprising only 2.5% (15/610) of the total isolates.
Conclusion: The incidence and causes of mastitis are largely influenced by farm management. The relatively high prevalence of coliform mastitis in the intensive high-producing herds in this survey contrasts with the low incidence reported in surveys of pasture-based herds in Victoria. If the Australian dairy industry continues its current trend of intensification, coliform intra-mammary infections may emerge as an increasingly important cause of mastitis.
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