Tuesday, 06 March 2012 11:51

TB controls eased in central North Island

Written by 

THE HARD work of TB vector control is starting to pay dividends across the Central North Island.

Last week the Animal Health Board announced a total of 2450 cattle and deer herds across the region Island have had their bovine tuberculosis (TB) movement control restrictions or testing requirements reduced.

AHB technical and farm services manager Stu Hutchings says the reduction is due to falling herd infection rates and a strong focus on TB-infected wildlife control.

“This has been achieved through focused possum control and other wildlife surveillance to assess whether TB is still present in an area.

“However, it would not have been possible without the help and co-operation of farmers,” he adds. 

AHB’s revised TB control strategy aims to eradicate TB from wild animal populations, which will lead to even less herd testing in the future. Infected wild animals, particularly possums, continue to be the main carrier of TB and source of the disease in farmed cattle and deer.

The changes to the movement control restrictions will affect herd owners in the northern tip of the Central North Island Movement Control Area (MCA) from March 1, 2012.

“The change to the MCA boundary will remove the need for pre-movement herd testing of 199 cattle and deer herds,” says Hutchings.

Of the 2450 affected herds, more than 2250 will benefit from less TB testing due to changes in Special Testing Area policies in the North Island. 

Hutchings says AHB is “proud to once again deliver some direct benefits to registered cattle and deer herds.”

Central North Island deer farmer Leith Chick, who has had his herd movement restrictions revoked, says it’s a major step forward for TB control in the area.  

“Farmers’ continued support and compliance with the TB control strategy has contributed greatly to the reduction in the Central North Island MCA and changes to testing requirements,” says Chick.  Affected herdowners will be notified of when their next test is due, or can visit www.tbfree.org.nz/dcamap to check if they have been affected by the changes.

More like this

TB testing in-house

OSPRI will carry out on-farm TB testing, following AsureQuality's decision not to renew their contract.

TB free again!

Herds in the West Coast settlement of Hari Hari are TB free after a four-year battle to get on top of the area's last outbreak.

OSPRI supporting farmers post-cyclone

In the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle, OSPRI says it is taking a pragmatic approach to TB testing in the Hawke’s Bay Movement Control Area (MCA).

Helping farmers fight TB

Peter McNab has been involved with TB Free for more than 30 years and was a key driver and supporter of the programme through the times when bovine TB was present in many herds in Otago. After 33 years on the Otago OSPRI Committee he has stepped down. Here is his story.

Featured

DairyNZ seeks more cash

For the first time in 17 years, DairyNZ wants farmers to contribute more cash to run the industry-good organisation.

EPA's plan 'not good enough'

The Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) is bolstering its frontline applications teams in a bid to reduce the timeframe for new product applications, but agri chemical producers say that it isn't good enough.

Fonterra urged to seek extension to GMO bill consultation

With less than a week to go before submissions close on the Government’s controversial Gene Technology Bill, two agribusiness executives - John Greenberg and Michael Henne - are calling on Fonterra to demand an extension to the submission period.

National

Good season for apples

Brydon Nisbet, the president of Hawke's Bay Fruit Growers Federation, says the mood of growers in Hawke's Bay is quite…

Machinery & Products

Loosening soil without fuss

Distributed in New Zealand by Carrfields, Grange Farm Machinery is based in the Holderness region of East Yorkshire – an…

JCB unveils new models

The first of the UK’s agricultural trade shows was recently held at the NEC Centre in Birmingham.

» Latest Print Issues Online

The Hound

Who's the glutton?

OPINION: We are told there is a wine glut - production outstripping demand worldwide - and the words 'wine lakes'…

Colonial science?

OPINION: Science funding for the bulwark of the nation, agriculture, is in a parlous state and less taxpayer money is…

» Connect with Rural News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter