INCIDENCE OF MASTITIS IN IMPORTED JERSEY COWS

Print
Parent Category: 1984

MOHAMED SHAFIT HUSSAIN AND ABAS MAZNI

SUMMARY

This paper reports the mastitis incidence, its causative organisms and the effect of the infection on milk production in a herd of imported Jersey cattle at MARDI , Serdang from 1979 to 1981. From late 1979 to December 1980 the levels of infection in cows dropped from 95% to 15.2% and from 55.7% to 10.9% . In quarters. From January 1981 till July 1981, fluctuations in infection ranged from 63% to 27.5% in cows and from 34% to 19.4% in quarters. Staphylococcus aureus was the predominant organism isolated. Streptococcus agalactiae occurred in 2.2% of the samples. In antibiotic sensitivity tests were performed on S. aureus, 12.5%, 25%, 13.3% , 11.8% and 20% of the isolates were resistant to penicillin, ampicillin, chloramphenicol and streptomycin, respectively. P. aeruginosa was resistant to all but slightly, resistant to Kanamycin and 100% sensitive to polymyxin B. Infected cows with a Rapid Mastitis Test (RMT) score of 2 above produced on an average 386 kg less milk per lactation than unintected cows.

Full Text (401 KB)