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The elevation of somatic cell counts SCC in affected quarters reflects the possibility of infection and is the standard method
to discriminate between healthy and mastitis-infected cows. A total of 368 milk samples at cow level were collected from a
single dairy farm located near Mount Gambier, South Australia. The farm had a history of chronic mastitis with poor response to
antimicrobials and an increasing number of cows with high SCC. Most cows appeared clinically normal at the time of sample collection.
A conventional microscopic culture method was used to detect Mycoplasma spp. Individual cow yield production parameters (e.g.,
volume, fat and protein percentage) and SCC for sampled and non-sampled cows was obtained by means of herd testing information.
The effect of mastitis (Mycoplasma spp., or undifferentiated was compared to the rest of the herd (assumed to be without mastitis)
using analysis of variance (ANOVA). The SCC showed significant difference between sampled cows and the remainder of the herd.
However, no significant difference was observed between cows with Mycoplasma spp., caused or undifferentiated mastitis. Milk
production was significantly affected being 33.5�±0.2 and 29.9�±0.5 L/cow/day in cows with mastitis and the rest of the herd. The nonsignificant
difference observed between Mycoplasma spp., induced mastitis and undifferentiated mastitis in this study, likely reflected
the similarity in the influence of these pathogens on SCC. Correspondingly, milk yield was similarly affected by Mycoplasma spp.,-
like bacteria and undifferentiated pathogens. These findings point the importance of the detection of these bacteria amongst other
common mastitis pathogens.
Biography
Abd Al-Bar Al-Farha has completed his Bachelor and Master degree in Veterinary Science from The University of Mosul and he is currently a PhD student at The University of Adelaide, School of Animal and Veterinary Science, South Australia. He is a Lecturer at The North Technical College in Iraq and has two papers published to his credit.