Mitigating the risk of neospora

Vet, Rob Hall of LLM Farm Vets, discusses the cost of abortions caused by neosporosis and best practice for controlling and preventing the disease

clock • 5 min read
Dogs are initially infected with the disease after ingesting neospora infected bovine tissues in the form of an aborted calf or placenta.
Image:

Dogs are initially infected with the disease after ingesting neospora infected bovine tissues in the form of an aborted calf or placenta.

The second most commonly diagnosed infectious cause of abortion within UK dairy herds, is the parasitic disease, neosporosis. Typically causing late term pregnancy losses, at five to six months of...

To continue reading...

Already a member? Login for full access.

Login

New to Farmers Guardian? Register for 1 free article per week or become a member for unlimited access to essential farming news and insights.

article-img-580x358

 

Axial Flow 6150 X-Flow. x

Axial Flow 6150 X-Flow. x

VIEW ADVERT
£POA

CASEIH AXIAL FLOW 7150

CASEIH AXIAL FLOW 7150

VIEW ADVERT
£POA

NEW CLAYDON 7.5M HARROW

NEW CLAYDON 7.5M HARROW

VIEW ADVERT
£POA

More on Dairy

Judges announced for UK Dairy Day 2025

Judges announced for UK Dairy Day 2025

Top cattle show judges from around the UK will be in Telford on September 10, 2025 to officiate at UK Dairy Day 2025.

clock 01 May 2025 • 2 min read
Integrated beef supply chain gives clear targets for calf rearing on Cheshire dairy farm

Integrated beef supply chain gives clear targets for calf rearing on Cheshire dairy farm

For Jack Allwood having a clear policy for the beef-sired calves on his family's dairy farm is key

clock 30 April 2025 • 5 min read
Muller farmers forced to dump milk due to plant breakdown 'will be compensated in full'

Muller farmers forced to dump milk due to plant breakdown 'will be compensated in full'

Grant Hartman, chair of MMG dairy farmers said farmers he had spoken to were ‘frustrated' but were comforted by the fact Muller had confirmed no farmer will lose out

Rachael Brown
clock 22 April 2025 • 3 min read