fbpx
Print this page
Wednesday, 27 June 2012 15:50

Experts meet on udder health

Written by 

UDDER HEALTH on dairy farms remains a priority and the control of the infectious pressure of mastitis-causing pathogens is the key to improving dairy herd productivity. This was the conclusion of the recent 5th European Mastitis Panel (EMP) meeting near Bristol, southwest England. 

Fifteen experts from seven European countries participated in a two-day workshop involving visits to typical farms and an exchange of expertise on the latest in mastitis control in Europe. 

British dairy farming is mainly pasture based and rain quantity has a significant impact on grass growth and so on the quality and quantity of the main fodder for dairy cattle. 

Despite the fact most herds calve year round, spring and summer milk production is increased up to 15%.

“Here, smaller as well as larger farms work profitably”, says Julie Macleod, market researcher at Dairy Co, a non-profit consultancy servicing UK dairy farmers. “Input and management are the decisive factors and farmers are flexible and react quickly to changes in the milk market.” 

The bulk of the milk is processed as fresh liquid (50%) and as cheese (28%). During a visit to Robert Wiseman Dairies, Bridgewater, the EMP veterinarians saw how fresh milk is collected, processed and bottled daily. 500 million L of milk are bottled annually at this facility. 

Effectiveness and sustainability are the main concerns of the company and as a result decisive measures are in place to reduce water, power and fuel consumption.

Since there is no public milk recording in the UK, veterinarian Dr James Breen works closely with the Quality Milk Management Service Laboratory. The EMP group visited the newly opened premises of Dr Andrew Bradley’s QMMS. Farmers can bring milk samples to the laboratory and get analysis results the following day, plus a veterinary interpretation of the data, giving information on the herd’s health status. 

Also, the laboratory offers bacteriological culturing of milk samples and offers serological testing for para-TB (Johne’s disease). Bradley also offers software for veterinarians and farmers to find the causes of mastitis and fine-tune herd management measures.

Veterinarian Chris Hudson spoke about mastitis research in the UK. 

The University of Nottingham is one of the most active institutes in this field doing many relevant studies. Adjacent to a campus shared with the agricultural faculty, the university also runs a dairy farm with 180 cows milked by robotic voluntary milking. 

“Research conditions are very favorable here” says researcher Chris Hudson, one of a group overseen by Martin Green, Andrew Bradley and James Breen. All the scientists are somewhat involved in veterinary clinics.

Featured

Dr Mike Joy says sorry, escapes censure

Academic Dr Mike Joy and his employer, Victoria University of Wellington have apologised for his comments suggesting that dairy industry CEOs should be hanged for contributing towards nitrate poisoning of waterways.

People-first philosophy pays off

The team meeting at the Culverden Hotel was relaxed and open, despite being in the middle of calving when stress levels are at peak levels, especially in bitterly cold and wet conditions like today.

Farmer anger over Joy's social media post

A comment by outspoken academic Dr Mike Joy suggesting that dairy industry leaders should be hanged for nitrate contamination of drinking/groundwater has enraged farmers.

From Nelson to Dairy Research: Amy Toughey’s Journey

Driven by a lifelong passion for animals, Amy Toughey's journey from juggling three jobs with full-time study to working on cutting-edge dairy research trials shows what happens when hard work meets opportunity - and she's only just getting started.

National

Machinery & Products

JDLink Boost for NZ farms

Connectivity is widely recognised as one of the biggest challenges facing farmers, but it is now being overcome through the…

New generation Defender HD11

The all-new 2026 Can-Am Defender HD11 looks likely to raise the bar in the highly competitive side-by-side category.