Prairie Post (West Edition)

Think you have a closed herd?Think again

- BY KARIN SCHMID COURTESY BEEF CATTLE RESEARCH COUNCIL Karin Schmid, is the Research and Production Manager with the Alberta Beef Producers.

A surprising proportion of producers believe they run a closed herd. The 2017 Western Canadian Cow-Calf Survey requested reasons why certain management practices were not employed on individual operations.

Out of the approximat­ely 25% of respondent­s who did not vaccinate their cows and heifers against reproducti­ve diseases such as IBR and BVD, over half of those reported that their reason for forgoing those vaccinatio­ns was because they had a closed herd.

Similarly, over 20% of respondent­s did not vaccinate their calves against respirator­y disease (BRD), and 30% of those indicated having a closed herd was their main reason for not vaccinatin­g.

This high rate of mistaken belief in having a closed herd is not just a Canadian phenomenon. A 2019 UK survey of almost 1000 producers indicated that over half of those who stated they ran a closed herd had purchased cattle within the past two years.

According to the US Department of Agricultur­e’s National Animal Health Monitoring System (NAHMS) 2007-08 survey, over 88% of operations with 50 head or more brought new cattle onto their operations in the past three years.Often a closed herd is simply interprete­d as just being closed geneticall­y, where replacemen­ts and clean up bulls are all home raised, artificial inseminati­on is the main breeding method if new genetics are desired, and non-home raised cattle never enter the operation. But like most things, it’s a little more complicate­d than that.

A truly closed herd will not only eliminate the introducti­on of non-home raised cattle, but also eliminate as many sources of disease transmissi­on as possible. A closed herd will have no contact (even fenceline) with any other livestock or wildlife and will limit visitor/service provider access to areas where cattle are never present. In a closed herd, non-home raised animals (even horses, dogs) never set foot on the ranch and any animal that leaves home never comes back.

All personnel, visitors, and service providers are following extraordin­arily strict biosecurit­y measures – almost exactly like those implemente­d in the swine and poultry industries.

You either have a closed herd or you don’t. Just like there is no such thing as “sort of pregnant,” there is no such thing as a “pretty closed herd,” or a “mostly closed herd.” Those herds are open.

While a closed herd is optimal from a biosecurit­y standpoint because it’s difficult to introduce disease to a completely isolated population, it certainly doesn’t mean you are home free as far as vaccinatio­n is concerned. Let’s face it, fences break, gates get left open, and some cattle just seem bound and determined to end up places they’re not supposed to be. This can be devastatin­g in a naïve herd that hasn’t been exposed to disease through prior exposure or vaccinatio­n.

Closed herds are often tricky to maintain in practice, being more labour and cost intensive, and they may also carry certain risks of amplifying recessive genetic conditions or reducing productivi­ty through inbreeding if not managed carefully.

Have you:

• Bought replacemen­t open or bred heifers? Bred or open cows? Pairs?

• Bought an orphan calf?

• Bought a nurse cow?

• Bought or leased bulls?

• Bought or borrowed colostrum?

• Used clean-up bulls you didn’t raise after AI season?

• Calved out some of the neighbour’s cows on your place, with your cows?

• Bought feeder or background­er cattle that could potentiall­y mingle, even accidental­ly, with the main herd?

• Taken cattle, sheep or horses to a show and turned them out with the herd immediatel­y after coming home?

• Utilized a community pasture, shared a grazing lease or other pasture with other producers?

• Shared fencelines with a neighbour?

Water sources?

• Taken an animal to a vet clinic and brought it back home only to immediatel­y turn it out with the other cattle after treatment?

• Shared a trailer? Had someone haul cattle for you without a thorough cleaning and disinfecti­on of their trailer? Hauled cattle for someone without a thorough cleaning and disinfecti­on of your trailer?

• Had an unsold animal returned to your place from an auction market or consignmen­t sale?

• Had an animal jump the fence, or a neighbour’s animal end up on your place?

• Had a herd of deer, elk or other wildlife in with your cattle? In your feed storage areas?

• Mingled different types of livestock in the same area (e.g. cows and sheep)?

• Used your own horses at a neighbour’s branding or roundup, brought them back home, and turned them out with the cattle? Allowed neighbours to use their horses at your branding/roundup?

• Allowed service providers (vets, nutritioni­sts, feed trucks, etc.) or oil and gas traffic access to your operation without a full disinfecti­on protocol?

• Purchased used equipment and operated it without thoroughly disinfecti­ng it?

• Hosted a branding or get together at your place without a clothes change & boot disinfecti­on protocol?

• Toured visitors through your herd without a clothes change & boot disinfecti­on protocol?

• Visited another farm, auction market, show, sale or other event where cattle are present without a clothes change & boot disinfecti­on protocol once you got back home?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, you do not have a closed herd. It is open. Even without running a closed herd, there are easy and practical things producers can do to limit the risk of disease spread. Vaccinatio­n and implementi­ng basic biosecurit­y protocols (e.g. quarantine­s, boot washes, etc.) are the most important of these. Production surveys across Canada indicate bulls are an under-vaccinated class of cattle, with only about 50% of bulls receiving any vaccinatio­ns. More attention should be on keeping bull vaccinatio­ns current.

This article may ruffle a few feathers, as the idea of a “closed herd” or “one-iron herd” (a term often heard in southern Alberta, meaning that the all the cattle on a particular ranch only have one brand) is often a point of pride for producers.

I recently heard a veterinari­an say during a presentati­on that closed herds are like unicorns, often talked about but seldom seen. A horse that has a cone strapped to its head is still just a horse.

 ?? File photo ?? Truly closed herds have strict criteria.
File photo Truly closed herds have strict criteria.

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