A2O-LancMt*r Firming, Saturday, Novembtr 19, 1994 UNIVERSITY PARK. (Centre Co.) Pennsylvania dairy farm ers will soon have a new tool to help control mastitis, the costliest disease of dairy cattle. A comput erized expert system developed at Penn State will be field-tested over the next several months and may be available statewide as early as next year. Mastitis is the most expensive cow health problem in the dairy industry according to Dr. William Heald, professor of dairy and ani mal science. “By cutting milk pro duction, ruining udder tissue and even killing cows, the disease causes estimated annual losses of $2OO per cow. That’s a loss of about $2 billion in North America every year,” he said. Developed by Heald and other researchers in Penn State’s Col lege of Agricultural Sciences, the system can help dairy producers minimize herd udder health prob lems. Dairy consultants can use it to help their clients develop more effective control programs. “Having a computerized masti TOP PRICES FOR ALL TYPES OF BEEF CATTLE CULL COWS, BULLS, STEERS, alio Down or Cripplod Cattle Tom Mulvaney, wStr Efls, ° n ' pA vn 610-258-1670 1-800-789-COWS (2697) Calls Taken 6 AM to 10 PM - 7 Days A Week IN PA - Northampton, Lehigh, Berks, Lancaster and parts of Chester & Lebanon Counties ★ All Cattle Paid on Hanging Dressed Weight ★ WHAT’S AHEAD FOR CORN & SOYBEAN • We Deal In Futures And Options • Our Only Business is Commodity Futures And Options • Same Location And Principals For Over 20 Years • When Buying options, your risk is limited to the loss of the premium paid plus all transaction costs. Buying futures and options have inherent risks and should be done only with risk capital. FOR INFORMATION. .. LITERATURE... CHARTS... PLEASE CALL 215-821-8111 800-543-8939 LEHIGH VALLEY FUTURES INC. Suite LL6,2200 Hamilton St., Allentown, PA 18104 The risk of loss in trading futures and options on futures can be substantial futures and options trading may not be suitable for everyone You should carefully consider the risks in light of your financial condition in deciding whether to trade Dairy Farmers To Have New Mastitis Control Tool tis knowledge base should help reduce financial losses due to mastitis and improve the quality of milk marketed by Pennsylvania dairy farmers,” said Heald. You don’t need to be a comput er expert to use the program, either. “We designed it to be user friendly, so it requires minimal computer skills,” said Heald. “Most of the program’s functions are controlled by pointing and clicking with a cursor.” Over the next several months, Heald will be sharing the program with veterinarians, DHIA officials, cooperative extension agents and dairy farmers in the southeastern part of the state. Their feedback will be used to develop a final ver sion of the program. The program helps farmers design mastitis control schemes based on various degrees of aggressive treatment. “The system can’t diagnose the disease in cows, but it can help producers identify problems that might be contribut ing to mastitis on their farms,” Heald said. “It can then suggest specific strategies to reduce masti tis problems in the herd.” The system incorporates infor mation about identifying and con trolling mastitis problems from a wide range of sources. The pro gram’s 170 screens are inter linked, so by pointing and clicking users can easily retrieve informa tion on specific mastitis topics they select. The screens include text, pictures of laboratory cul tures and graphical data. The system targets problems State Approves Farmland Purchases HARRISBURG, (Dauphin Co.) The Pennsylvania Agri cultural Land Preservation Board approved easement purchases for seven farms in four counties, ensuring that 1,159 acres of prime farmland will remain in agricul tural use. “These farms will join over 460 others that are a part of the Farmland Preservation Program,” said State Agriculture Secretary and Board Chairman Boyd E. Wolff. “Pennsylvania, with over on individual farms by analyzing data from Dairy Herd Improve ment Association (DHIA) main frame computers. “It can retrieve data for individual cows or the whole herd, show all the related information and suggest possible mastitis management lapses,” Heald said. “Users can download a herd’s DHIA records using a modem and evaluate them auto matically, saving time and effort.” The system analyzes somatic cell score (SCS) data as well as general herd management infor- 57,000 preserved acres, is second in the nation. Following are the properties approved, listed by county, owner, township, acreage and pur chase cost: • Chester —Mary F. Porter, East Nottingham Township, 176 acres, $450,944. • Chester —Linda Rice, High land Township, 113 acres $397,408. • Dauphin—Mary L. Boyer, Washington and Upper Paxton mation. “It also shows SCS trends and identifies cows with the high est SCS in current and previous months,” said Heald. Michael Foster, director of the college’s Laboratory for Artificial Intelligence Applications, and dairy science project assistants Tai-Oun Kim and Joan Cooper helped develop the system, along with Patricia Toretti, senior pro grammer for Pennsylvania DHIA. The researchers will continue to refine the system using comments and feedback from people who field-test it this year. Townships, 80 acres, $120,600. • Dauphin—Allen Shaffer, Upper Paxton Township, 100 acres, $120,048. • Northampton—Gordon J. and Armell D. Mann, Allen Town ship, 321 acres, $1,026,627. • York—Brian and Dorothy Grimm, Peach Bottom Township, 243 acres, $234,708. • York—Mahlon and Beverly Martin, Codorus and North Codorus townships, 126 acres, $164,675.