Animal WASHINGTON, D.C. - The branding practices of the Old West still serve many purposes today. But they are more than just a way to settle livestock squabbles. The practices of tagging, branding, tattooing and branding are also in strumental in the control and eradication of costly animal diseases. For example, brucellosis, a reproductive disease, costs the cattle industry over $56 million each year in direct production losses, as well as disease control expenses on We Special Work Usmj Twin Bucki BoomTrui We Have Poles In Stock 22’, 25’, 30' & 35’ SPECIAL OF THE WEEK ► 400 GAL. DARI-KOOL MAKE ME A BULK MILK COOLER THAT HAS EVERYTHING! CONTACT QUEEN ROAD REFRIGERATION TO SEE A IN OPERATION, RIGHT ON THE FARM. QUEEN ROAD REFRIGERATION BOX 67, INTERCOURSE, PA. 17534 PHONE: 717-768-9006 After 5 P.M. JOHN D. WEAVER 768-8355 GID DIENNER 768-8521 SAM STOLTZFUS 768-3594 OR Answering Service 354-4374 24 Hour Service identification the farm. Taxpayers con tribute $9O million per year in state and federal funds to control and eradicate the cattle disease. Without such controls, however, USDA officials estimate that within 10 years the losses to the cattle industry through brucellosis disease could exceed $B5O million each year. Only through com prehensive animal iden tification can the source of a threatening livestock disease be quickly traced, according to Fred Powers, a ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING Specializing In POULTRY HOUSE WIRING! Iso Residential, Industrial And Commerical Work. Free Estimates > C. M. HIGH CO. program specialist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). Proper identification - coupled with disease sur veillance programs - can also help improve livestock quality through monitoring of the livestock population and pinpointing diseased herds which may than be freed of infection. On the other hand, lack of versatile, . widesprc-l identification slows disease eradication efforts. Four Box 175 RD2 Myerstown, PA 17067 Phone: 717-866-7544 375 gal. DeLaval 425 gal. Esco 400 gal. DeLaval 625 gal. Esco 500 galSOLDieper 500 gal. Mojonnier (2) 600 gal. Milkeeper 600 gat. Mojonnier 350ga1. Esco eases disease control steps are essential for the surveillance of animal health: application of identification devices, maintenance of herd-of origin records, identification recovery, and the correlation of information to trace disease outbreaks. A prime example of identification as a disease control measure is the Market Cattle Identification program instituted by Washington state in 1955 and adopted-nationwide in 1960. It involves putting official backtags on cattle at market. The tag, which often doubles as a market’s sale tag, denotes the state where the animal orginated, market in which it was sold and the animal’s owner. Market operators keep sale and tag records. The tags are used to identify blood samples collected at livestock markets or at slaughter for brucellosis tests. If test results indicate disease, veterinarians can trace the animal’s movement back to the owner and start ap Garber Oil Co. |texaco] Fuel Chief HEATING GIL * SOIL HEATING EQUIPMENT AIR CONDITIONING MOUNT JOY. PA Ph. 653-1821 n the market for a bulk milk cooler and you don’t check all the of the Mueller “OH” “MHL', and “MW” you may be buying an ler. USED TANKS lancaster Farming, Saturday, September 9,1978 propriate action to eliminate infection in other - cattle. “This is much easier and far less expensive than ‘down the-road’ testing of every eligible cow,” Powers points out. In 1977,27.3 million head of the nation’s cattle were backtagged, compared with 1.4 million 14 years before. This increase reflects the livestock industry’s realization that a uniform identification system and accurate records are necessary for an effective disease surveillance program. “More precision and standardization in backtagging would greatly improve the program’s effectiveness level,” said Powers. If all markets used the official backtag for main taining records of sales as' well as 'identification, he said, and if all states used standard size tags with the standard coding system and adopted uniform policies for collection of blood samples at slaughter, the program would avoid unnecessary complications. But the identification is only as good as the care taken in applying the tag. Powers said. A few buyers have switched or removed tags before or after interstate trade, com plicating the tracing of in fected and exposed animals. USDA levies fines up to $5OO for the interstate movement of cattle without backtags. Powers believes these practices occur because some producers and THE MUELLER MODELS OH, MHL, AND MW WITH HIPERFORM MAKE ALL OTHER BULK MILK COOLERS OBSOLETE SEE THE MUELLER NEW MODELS ★ 500 MW ★ 600 MW The “MW" is one of the Lowest pouring Height Bulk tanks. Check with us all the new features of the “MW” bulk tank. 400 gal. Dari-Kool 2-400 gal. Jamesway D-2 600 gal. Girton 400 gal. Sunset D-2 400 gal. Girton 735 gal. Sunset 500 gal. Wilson 500 gal. Mueller livestock dealers do not understand how iden tification relates to animal health. Better com munication between state federal health officials and cattle owners can help solve that, according to Powers. “Disease eradication programs rely on the co operation of market operators and livestock producers,” he said. Some other methods for livestock identification in clude orange-colored vac cination eartags for calves, bangletags, hot brands, freeze brands, slap tattoes for swine, and leg bands for birds. Examples of disease status identification include the “B” and “S” brands on the left jaw of cattle, the first indicating the animal has brucellosis and the second that is has been exposed or is a suspected carrier. Powers described the ideal identification tool as one that would be premanent, economical, easy to apply, legible, specific to each animal, minimally painful to apply, tamperproof and adaptable to coding and computerization. Producers and market operators may soon start using a newly developed electronic identification system to meet these needs. Electronic identification operates by means of a device implanted beneath the animal’s skin. It can be activated to transmit the animal’s identification number and body tem perature. USDA supported (Turn to Page 125) 123