Weekend Herald

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We know other farmers in the area have concerns. This is entirely understand­able. Chris Rodwell, Ministry of Primary Industries

The Ministry for Primary Industries has named the South Canterbury farm hit by cattle disease Mycoplasma bovis as belonging to the Van Leeuwen Dairy Group.

MPI said work continues at pace on the large farming operation in the South Canterbury/ Oamaru area to manage the disease.

One farm in the Van Leeuwen Dairy Group of farms had confirmed test results that are positive for the disease. Tests have been carried out on stock on other farms in the enterprise.

The ministry has 16 individual properties within the operation under Restricted Place Notices controllin­g the movement of stock and other risk goods off the farms.

The farms are owned by Aad and Wilma van Leeuwen, Fairfax reported. The couple, who feature on the National Business Review’s Rich List 2017, are resigned to having 150 of their cattle destroyed, Fairfax said.

The van Leeuwens’ massive robotic dairy shed, the largest in the world, can house up to 1500 cows. The van Leeuwens also have a number of satellite farms in the region.

MPI’s regional controller Chris Rodwell said the situation was well under control with support from the affected farm owner and farm managers.

“They’re working closely with us during what is a difficult and stressful time for them and I applaud their level of profession­alism,” he said. MPI’s focus is to identify affected stock and contain the disease. This is being done by isolating the affected farms. The farmer concerned has euthanised a small number of animals voluntaril­y for animal welfare reasons.

“At this time we are still determinin­g the scale of this situation through on- farm sampling and testing, and tracing of movements of stock on and off the properties,” MPI said.

“This will help inform our future management activities which we are currently working up in partnershi­p with the animal industry bodies.” These could include area movement controls, selective culling of some stock or other long term management measures.

Rodwell said MPI’s existing activities were sufficient to contain the disease.

“We know other farmers in the area have concerns. This is entirely understand­able.”

Ministry staff spoke at a well- attended meeting of local farmers in Glenavy yesterday morning.

Rodwell said the disease was a slowmoving one that is transmitte­d by close contact between animals and not across big dis- tances by wind or water.

Mycoplasma bovis is spread by animal to animal contact and can be present in milk transmitte­d to other cows this way.

“We need to be clear, though, that the presence of the bacteria does not affect the safety of dairy products for human consumptio­n,” Rodwell said. “This is not a food safety or human health concern.

“We’re working closely with the industry to trace and assure supply chains of the safety of product, including products for export.”

“It’s devastatin­g, especially for the people working on the farm,” Aad Van Leeuwen told Fairfax.

“It just hits you and you don’t know what to think, you don’t know where it comes from.”

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