Title: Presentation tool for Animal Health Veterinary Officers
1Presentation tool for Animal Health Veterinary
Officers
- Bovine TB
- Husbandry Best Practice Advice
2Dairy products Meat
M. bovis transmission
PURCHASE
Cattle testing Surveillance Biosecurity Husbandry
SALE
X
X
X
Pasteurisation Meat inspection
Pre-movement testing
Pre-movement testing
X
Cattle herd
X
Biosecurity Husbandry measures
SLAUGHTER
Cattle testing and Surveillance Biosecurity Husban
dry measures
Biosecurity Husbandry measures
DIRECT Badgers to cattle
DIRECT Cattle to Badgers
Badger social group
3Bovine TB Husbandry Advice suggested measures
to reduce your risk
- Keep badgers away from stored feed badgers
infected with TB can contaminate feed. - Make your farmyard less attractive for badgers
badgers are likely to be attracted to accessible
feed and may spread disease to cattle. - Be aware of main badger latrines and active setts
at pasture where possible keep cattle away from
these high risk areas. - Keep cattle away from neighbouring cattle herds
disease can spread between cattle. - Protect your herd Source bought in stock
carefully and adhere to isolation procedures for
any inconclusive or reactor animals.
4Keep badgers away from stored cattle feed
- Make walls and doors of feed stores secure
especially if they are used for storage of
straights or concentrate feed.
5Keep badgers away from stored cattle feed
- Ensure feed store doors are shut, especially in
the evening / at night as this is the peak time
for badger visits. - Ensure doors and walls of feed stores have no
gaps and are inaccessible to badgers. - If your feed store is accessible to badgers and
too costly to modify consider storing your feed
in a different building or in secure containers. - If building a new feed store, consider ways of
preventing wildlife access.
6Badger and feed sacks
Click here to play video
7Badgers and dog
Click here to play video
8Badgers on a grain pile
Click here to play video
9Badgers access feed from a silo chute
Click here to play video
10Badgers around a feed trailer inside a feed store
Click here to play video
11Make your farmyard less attractive for badgers
- Avoid leaving feed easily accessible in the farm
yard as this is an attraction to badgers. - Avoid feeding cattle on the ground in the
farmyard. Consider ways of preventing badgers
from gaining access to feed. - Ensure silage clamps, are well covered and
consider protecting the open face by electric
netting at times when access is not needed.
12Make your farmyard less attractive for badgers
- While it may be
- difficult to keep badgers out of cattle housing
completely, it makes sense where possible to make
cattle housing more difficult for badgers to
access
13Badger in bull pen
Click here to play video
14Badgers in cattle housing
Click here to play video
15Electric fencing
Click here to play video
16Be aware of main badger latrines and active setts
at pasture
- Be aware that feeding at pasture may be a higher
risk than feeding in the farmyard. Avoid feeding
concentrates on the ground at pasture. - Be aware of high risk areas such as badger
latrines and active setts at pasture - Be aware that certain forms of grazing can be
more of a risk. Intensive grazing in particular
may encourage cattle to feed at field margins
where there is a greater risk of contamination
from badger faeces and urine at badger latrines.
Avoid allowing cattle access to woodland.
17Be aware of main badger latrines and active setts
at pasture
- Feed troughs can become contaminated by wildlife
so keep an eye out for such signs of
contamination and clean these out regularly - If you use molassed blocks, consider taking
measures to make them more difficult for badgers
to access e.g. suspending them - Be aware that badger carcasses are a potential
source of disease and dispose of them sensibly.
18Keep cattle away from neighbouring cattle herds
- Ensure perimeter fencing, including gateways, are
adequate to prevent nose-to-nose contact with
cattle on neighbouring farms. Common grazing,
nose-to-nose contact at shared water courses etc
are areas of particular risk for disease
transmission between cattle. - Be aware that there is a risk of disease
transmission from hired or shared bulls.
19Protect your herd
- Check the TB status of farms from where you buy
your cattle (both the testing interval and the
date of the last 2 tests). Always ask for
appropriate evidence of testing and TB status for
all bought in cattle (more information available
in leaflet PB12494 TB in Cattle Reducing the
Risk Pre-and Post Movement Testing in Great
Britain ) - Where possible breed your own replacements and /
or use Artificial Insemination (AI) where
practical
20Protect your herd
- Adhere to isolation procedures for any
inconclusive or reactor animals. Isolate
inconclusive, reactor animals and any tracings
from confirmed TB breakdowns separately from the
herd. - Adhere to any statutory notice regarding
cleansing and disinfecting of buildings and
equipment.
21Sources of information
- Your Vet
- As all farms are different, farmers should
discuss the - most appropriate measures for their farms with
their vet. - TB Husbandry
- Defra TB Husbandry website www.defra.gov.uk/anima
lh/tb/abouttb/protect.htm - Leaflets (available from Animal Health Offices)
- Welsh Assembly Government advice
http//new.wales.gov.uk/topics/environmentcountry
side/ahw/disease_surveillance_control - Continued
22continued
- Farm Health Planning
- Defra Farm Health Planning website
www.defra.gov.uk/fhp/index.htm - Other useful publications
- Dealing with TB in Your Herd
- http//www.defra.gov.uk/animalh/tb/pdf/tbinyh.pdf
- TB Pre-Movement Testing Booklet
- http//www.defra.gov.uk/animalh/tb/premovement/pr
emove-booklet.pdf