Western Ag Life Magazine - Fall 2019

Page 16

HEALTH: BVD BVD is a threat that can be devastating to beef and dairy cattle operations if undetected, and the cow-calf operator is where detection needs to start. ARTICLE & PHOTOS BY PATINA THOMPSON

B

VD. There, I said it and I’m not talking about underwear, I’m talking about Bovine Viral Diarrhea (BVD) in cattle. BVD seems to be a topic producers avoid talking about as much as they avoid talking about underwear in public! BVD is a threat that can be devastating to beef and dairy cattle operations if undetected, and the cow-calf operator is where detection needs to start. Think back through your own experiences over the years, and stories from our ranching grandparents, of those few cows that “didn’t take”, or slipped a calf, a poor doer, or maybe a calf crop that just didn’t quite perform like it did in the past. You might blame the weather (don’t ranchers always blame the weather?), dust off the EPD’s on your bulls, or wonder if you have enough bulls to cover all your cows. Don’t point a finger at those bulls just yet though, these could all be signs of BVD in your herd. But you know what? BVD can be sneaky! You may not notice any signs at all. BVD infected calves/heifers/cows/bulls can gain and perform year after year! BVD is spread by contact with saliva, feces, nasal secretions, blood, urine, semen, milk, and it can also be contracted by calves while in utero via the placental wall. The time of exposure that is pivotal is the first trimester of pregnancy (months two through four), in which the fetus can contract and carry the virus after birth, IF they survive the pregnancy. Fetal protection is key. A calf born alive with BVD may appear healthy or show immediate signs. Calves may appear weak or be abnormally small, unthrifty, fail to nurse, may have ocular deformities, or a wide stance with swollen joints. The calf may not live past one year of age. Excessive diarrhea is the most common sign in older calves, and a poor growth rate is the most common sign in younger calves. Indicators of BVD in adults may be acute and include fever, depression, loss of appetite, excessive nasal secretions and excessive diarrhea that may last 1-3 days. A BVD positive calf doesn’t mean the mom will be positive either, it just means that the calf came in contact with, and couldn’t defend against the virus at some point. Downright sneaky, isn’t it? So, if properly immunized, healthy looking cattle can still contract BVD even though they may have been exposed to it and fought it off. How is it still in my herd or a threat to my herd? Well, add two more letters to that particular brand of underwear from the 1960’s and you have your culprit. BVD-PI – Persistently Infected. This means that the BVD-PI PG. 16 :: FALL 2019

individual has the virus, and will continually shed it in the environment for the rest of its life. This is the animal you must find and eliminate from your herd, and I don’t mean taking it to the auction or feedlot and make it someone else’s problem. More often than not, a PI animal is not easily detected visually and must be tested. Testing consists of a small notch from the ear that is sent to a lab for analysis. A PI positive animal should be quarantined from the herd for 30 days, re-tested, and can be safe for slaughter and human consumption if proper withdrawal times have been met. With feeder and stocker operations, this time frame may not be feasible logistically, so separation and a follow-up test after 14-21 days may be sufficient. The good news is that once an animal tests negative for PI, they will always be negative, so you only have to test them once. But remember that a cow that tested negative can still produce a PI positive calf in the future if she is exposed to the virus during that pivotal time during her pregnancy we talked about above. Later term exposure may not produce a PI calf, but it can cause birth defects and other symptoms. Why don’t all operations test for BVD-PI? Money, time, hassle, you name it. I get that gathering and testing and additional immunizations aren’t how you do it, or how your grandfather did it, or your mother’s cousin that has ranched since the 20’s did it. I get it. But you can add measures to help protect your herd as best you can, and protect the calves you sell from getting it when (not if), they are exposed to it later in life. I also get that you can’t expect a 100% calf crop every year due to weather (there it is again), predators, reproductive age, bulls, etc. However, BVD-PI is one of the myriad of things that factor into your calf crop you CAN control. A solution is quite simple and three-part, if you put the effort into it. The first step is testing your herd for the presence of BVD-PI. There are a number of labs across the country that charge a nominal fee (from $3.50/head to $5.50/head) for BVD-PI testing. Some of the labs provide all the supplies necessary from start to finish. It’s important to note that not all testing protocols require you test your entire herd, and there are several sampling methods to choose from. Assume a 200 head cow-calf operation tests all of their herd: 200 head of breeding stock, 15 bulls, and 160 calves (80% calf crop). Say, $3.50/head @ 375 head = $1,313.00. Continued on Page 18...


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.