The Economic Implications of Bioengineered Mastitis Control
Open Access
- 1 February 1992
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 75 (2) , 596-605
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(92)77797-2
Abstract
This paper estimates the cost of mastitis for the New York dairy sector. The average cost is found to be $125 per cow from reduced milk production, treatment, and increased culling. At the 1988 cow inventory, this translates to approximately $100 million annually for the entire dairy farm sector. When quality and production losses for the processing sector are added, the cost to the New York industry alone is nearly $150 million annually. Two promising new treatments, a bacteriocin and a vaccine, are evaluated. Both have shown effectiveness in preliminary trials against Staphylococcus aureus. Assuming that further development will allow the treatments to be effective against the major bacterial sources of mastitis infections, the treatments are projected to increase the annual income of the New York dairy industry by $18.8 to $39.7 million. The bacteriocin could replace antibiotic usage, a desirable goal in the opinion of many, and the vaccine promises to immunize cows against mastitis very effectively.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Factors Affecting Days of Discarded Milk Due to Clinical Mastitis and Subsequent Cost of Discarded MilkJournal of Dairy Science, 1987
- Occurrence and Reoccurrence of Clinical MastitisJournal of Dairy Science, 1987
- Path Model of Reproductive Disorders and Performance, Milk Fever, Mastitis, Milk Yield, and Culling in Holstein CowsJournal of Dairy Science, 1985
- Environmental Mastitis: Cause, Prevalence, PreventionJournal of Dairy Science, 1985
- Disease, production and culling in Holstein-Friesian cows I. The dataPreventive Veterinary Medicine, 1983
- Economic Losses from and the National Research Program on Mastitis in the United StatesJournal of Dairy Science, 1979
- THE EFFECT OF SOMATIC CELL CONCENTRATION IN THE RAW MILK ON THE SHELF-LIFE OF THE PROCESSED PRODUCT1Journal of Milk and Food Technology, 1972
- Relationship Between California Mastitis Test Reaction and Composition of Milk from Opposite QuartersJournal of Dairy Science, 1967