Abstract

BackgroundJohne’s disease is a major production limiting disease of dairy cows. The disease is chronic, progressive, contagious and widespread; there is no treatment and there is no cure. Economic losses arise from decreased productivity through reduced growth, milk yield and fertility and capital losses due to premature culling or death. This study attempts to address the effect of subclinical JD on milk production under New Zealand pastoral dairy farming conditions using a new testing approach. Blood samples were taken from all lactating animals from a single seasonally calving New Zealand dairy herd in the autumn of 2013 and 2014. Samples were subject to serological assay for antibodies to Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis using a combination of four ELISA tests in parallel followed by selective quantitative fecal PCR to confirm the fecal shedding characteristics of ELISA positive cows. ELISA status was classified as Not-Detected, Low, Moderate or High and fecal PCR status as Not-Detected, Moderate or High.ResultsA mixed generalized regression model indicated that, compared to cows where MAP was not detected, daily milk solids production was 4% less for high ELISA positive cows (p = 0.004), 6% less for moderate fPCR cows (p = 0.036) and 12% less for high fPCR cows (p < 0.001).ConclusionsThis study confirms that sub-clinical JD can have a significant impact on milk production and that the testing methodology used stratified the animals in this herd on their likely impact on production and disease spread. This allowed the farmer to prioritize removal of heavily shedding, less-productive animals and so reduce the risk of infection of young stock. This is the first longitudinal study based in New Zealand looking at the effect of Johne’s infection status on daily milk production allowing for intermediary and confounding factors.

Highlights

  • Johne’s disease is a major production limiting disease of dairy cows

  • Johne’s disease (JD) is a chronic disease of ruminants caused by intestinal infection with Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis (MAP)

  • At the end of the 2013–14 season (May 2014), 388 cows were culled (114 with an elevated ELISA and/or fecal PCR (fPCR) status) and 335 heifers joined the herd in July 2014

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Johne’s disease is a major production limiting disease of dairy cows. This study attempts to address the effect of subclinical JD on milk production under New Zealand pastoral dairy farming conditions using a new testing approach. Johne’s infection is predominantly subclinical in most dairy cows with farmers becoming aware of the disease when the clinical signs of infection such as diarrhoea and wasting become apparent [1]. Many farmers without direct experience of clinical JD in their herds consider that JD is not a major problem for their farm. Without clear evidence that MAP infection is linked to decreased milk production, the low clinical incidence of JD in most herds allows farmers to relegate MAP infection to the realm of natural losses

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call