Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T10:24:00.298Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

625. Udder infections in the ‘dry period’: III. The method of drying-off cows at the end of lactation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 June 2009

J. Oliver
Affiliation:
National Institute for Research in Dairying, University of Reading
F. H. Dodd
Affiliation:
National Institute for Research in Dairying, University of Reading
F. K. Neave
Affiliation:
National Institute for Research in Dairying, University of Reading

Extract

1. An experimental study was made of the effect of drying-off by ‘stop’ or intermittent milking on the incidence of new infection in the early dry period of dairy cows. Ninety-one and ninety-seven dry periods were examined following the treatments, and the results were analysed on a cow and quarter basis.

2. The incidence of new infection was similar for groups of cows dried off by ‘stop’ or intermittent milking.

3. The quarters of cows that were not infected on drying-off showed a significantly higher incidence (P <0·05) of new infection following ‘stop’ than following intermittent milking.

4. Of the cows that were not infected at the time of drying off, those which had a previous history of infection showed a significantly higher (P <0·01) incidence of new dry-period infection than cows that had not been infected before.

5. There was a much higher incidence of new infection in cows that were already infected on drying-off compared with cows free from infection at that time.

6. About half of all the new dry-period infections persisted until the next lactation, and about one-third of these resulted in mastitis in the affected quarter.

7. The method of drying-off had no effect on infections that were already established in quarters going dry.

8. The types of pathogen causing infection were similar for both methods of drying-off.

9. The method of ending lactation did not affect milk yield in the lactation following the dry period studied.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Proprietors of Journal of Dairy Research 1956

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

(1)Neave, F. K., Dodd, F. H. & Henriques, E. (1950). J. Dairy Res. 17, 37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(2)Oliver, J., Dodd, F. H., Neave, F. K. & Lee, J. M. (1956). J. Dairy Res. 23, 194.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
(3)Wayne, R., Eckles, C. H. & Petersen, W. E. (1933). J. Dairy Sci. 16, 69.Google Scholar
(4)Wayne, R. & Macy, H. (1933). J. Dairy Sci. 16, 79.Google Scholar
(5)Steyn, H. P. (1940). J. S. Afr. vet. med. Ass. 11, 123.Google Scholar
(6)Espe, D. & Smith, V. R. (1952). Secretion of Milk, p. 263. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State College Press.Google Scholar
(7)Motion, J. H. (1933). N.Z. Dairy Exptr. 8, 3.Google Scholar
(8)Rose, V. T. (1943). Vet. Med. 38, 14.Google Scholar
(9)Munch-Petersen, E., Murnane, D. & Bull, L. B. (1940). Bull. Coun. sci. industr. Res. Aust. 134, 22.Google Scholar
(10)Johnson, S. D. (1941). Cornell Vet. 31, 127.Google Scholar
(11)Neave, F. K., Dodd, F. H. & Lee, J. M. (1951). Ann. Rep. nat. Inst. Dairy., Reading, p. 23.Google Scholar
(12)Oliver, J., Dodd, F. H., Neave, F. K. & Bailey, G. L. (1956). J. Dairy Res. 23, 181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar