Original Research

Prevalence of mastitis in dairy cows from smallholder farms in Zimbabwe

Simbarashe Katsande, Gift Matope, Masimba Ndengu, Davies M. Pfukenyi
Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research | Vol 80, No 1 | a523 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/ojvr.v80i1.523 | © 2013 Simbarashe Katsande, Gift Matope, Masimba Ndengu, Davies M. Pfukenyi | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 27 September 2012 | Published: 28 March 2013

About the author(s)

Simbarashe Katsande, Department of Paraclinical Veterinary Studies, University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe
Gift Matope, Department of Paraclinical Veterinary Studies, University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe
Masimba Ndengu, Department of Clinical Veterinary Studies, University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe
Davies M. Pfukenyi, Department of Clinical Veterinary Studies, University of Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe

Abstract

A cross-sectional study was conducted to determine the prevalence of sub-clinical and clinical mastitis and the associated factors in cows from selected smallholder dairy farms in Zimbabwe. Physical examinations were conducted on all lactating cows for evidence of signs of clinical mastitis. Composite milk samples were collected from all lactating cows for bacterial culture and somatic cell counting. Cows were categorised as clinical if they exhibited clinical features of mastitis, or sub-clinical if no apparent signs were present but they had a positive bacterial isolation and a somatic cell count of at least 300 x 103 cells/mL. Farm-level factors were obtained through a structured questionnaire. The association of mastitis and animal- and herd-level factors were analysed using logistic regression. A total of 584 animals from 73 farms were tested. Overall, 21.1%(123/584) had mastitis, 16.3%(95/584) had sub-clinical mastitis and 4.8% (28/584) had clinical mastitis. Herd-level prevalence was 49.3%. Coagulase-negative staphylococci (27.6%),  Escherichia coli (25.2%),  Staphylococcus aureus(16.3%), Klebsiella spp. (15.5%) and Streptococcus spp. (1.6%) were the most common isolates. In individual cows, pure dairy herds (OR = 6.3) and dairy crosses (OR = 3.1) were more likely to have mastitis compared to Mashona cows. Farms that used pre-milking teat dipping were associated with reduced mastitis prevalence. Further research is needed on the prevalence of mastitis and a comparison of data for both smallholder and commercial dairy farms in all regions of Zimbabwe should be undertaken.

Keywords

Mastitis; Prevalence; Risk factors; Somatic cell counts; Smallholder dairy cows; Zimbabwe

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Crossref Citations

1. Abattoir-Based Survey of Mastitis in Cattle in Afyonkarahisar Province
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