July 20, 2018
Continued heavy rains are setting up conditions for an anthrax outbreak in the Dakotas.
Susan Keller, North Dakota’s state veterinarian, urges cattlemen to vaccinate herds.
Anthrax is caused by the bacteria Bacillus anthracis. The bacterial spores can lie dormant in the ground for decades and become active when conditions are right. The disease occurs most commonly following heavy rainfall, but may also occur during extremely dry conditions. Animals are exposed when they graze or consume forage or water contaminated with the spores.
Anthrax is responsible for recent deaths in two South Dakota cattle herds. Eight cows in Clark County, S.D., and four in Bon Homme County, S.D., recently died of anthrax. All were unvaccinated.
An effective anthrax vaccine is readily available, but it takes about a week for immunity to be established, and it must be administered annually to maintain protection.
"Producers should consult with their veterinarians to make sure their animals are current on their anthrax vaccination schedule," Keller says.
She recommends monitoring herds and reporting unexplained deaths.
"Even if not anthrax, it’s important to attempt to determine the cause of death to prevent other potential losses," she says.
Anthrax has been more frequently reported in northeast, southeast and south-central North Dakota, but historically it has been found in almost every part of the state.
It is not uncommon to have a few anthrax cases reported in North Dakota almost every year.
In 2005, however, more than 500 confirmed deaths from anthrax were reported, with total losses estimated at more than 1,000 head.
Affected animals included cattle, bison, horses, sheep, llamas and farmed deer and elk.
Learn more online at nd.gov/ndda/disease/anthrax.
Source: North Dakota State University Extension
You May Also Like