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Page 1: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the

New York City Watershed

Elizabeth Walker, MPH studentWalden University

PUBH 6165-2Instructor: Dr. Howard Rubin

Spring, 2011

Page 2: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

IntroductionEnvironmental Health Importance

Dairy Calves

Water sources

New York City

Page 3: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Water Facts

Water on Earth

Illnesses by waterWorld-wideUnited States

Moeller, 2005Circle of Blue, 2009

Jongo News, 2007

Page 4: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

History of the Watershed

Watershed Agricultural Council [WAC], 2010a,bEnvironmental Protection Agency [EPA], 2010

Croton Watershed, 1842Filtered

Catskill/Delaware system, 1907

Treated, unfiltered

USEPA, 2010Catskill Watershed Corporation, 2005

Cheeseman, 2011 Nicole, 2011

Page 5: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Regulations

Safe Drinking Water Act, 1986

Surface Water Treatment Rule,1989

USEPA, 2010NYC Department of Environmental Protection [DEP], 2011

Southern Nevada Water Authority, 2011

Page 6: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Watershed Agricultural Programs

Whole Farm Planning

Nutrient Management

Youngstock Pathogen Management

WAC, 2010b

Page 7: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Dairy Calf Health & Biosecurity

Kansas State University, 2003

Page 8: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

General Calf Health

Calf immunity

Common diseases

Early health

Penn State University [PSU], 2008Cornell University, 2011d

Squash Blossom Farm, 2009

Page 9: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Factors Affecting Calf Health

Calving area

Feeding

Weaning

Farm pathogen load

Housing

Environment

Stress

Cattle Health Assurance Program

Page 10: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Simple Mitigation Strategies & Benefits

For Factors Affecting Calf Health

Page 11: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Calving Area/Maternity Pen

Clean & dry

Fresh bedding

No other animals

Land O’ Lakes, 2010 EPA, 2005

Page 12: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

**First Feeding After Birth**

Antibody uptake

First Hour of Birth

Quality of colostrum

Land O’ Lakes, 2010PSU, 2008

Mallorie’s Dairy, Inc., 2010

Page 13: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Feeding After Birth

Colostrum from other cowsFurther feeding

Land O’ Lakes, 2010Cornell University, 2011b,c,d

University of Minnesota Extension, 2011Sirois, 2004

Effect on milk yield

Page 14: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Housing

Individual

structures

Ventilation

Draft-free

Comfortable

Hilson & Westenbroek, 2003bStarkey, et al., 2006

UK Agriculture, 2011Curtis, et al, 1988

Page 15: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Environment & Stress

Microenvironment (Farm)

HygieneBeddingRoutine tasks

Macroenvironment (Nature)

NYS seasonsFlooding

STRESS!

Page 16: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Time of Weaning the Calf

Wean from mother

Wean from milk and housing

Land O’ Lakes, 2010Hilson & Westenbroek, 2003a

Page 17: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

NYSCHAP

New York State Cattle Health Assurance Program

Free service

Risk-assessment

Herd Plan

Cornell University, 2011a NYSCHAP, 2009

Page 18: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Other Strategies

Iodine

Chores

Vaccinations

Record Keeping

Land O’ Lakes, 2010 Welsh Lamb and Beef Producers, 2009

Page 19: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Diseases and Pathogens of Interest

Growing Notes, 2003

Page 20: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Gastrointestinal (GI) Pathogens

Bacteria:

E.coliClostridiumSalmonella

Parasites:CryptosporidiaGiardia

Virus:Rota-virusCorona-virus

Land O’ Lakes, 2010 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2011

Page 21: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Mammary/Milk Transmitted Pathogens

Bacteria:SalmonellaInfectious MastitisMycoplasma Bovis (pneumonia)

Virus:Bovine Viral Diarrhea (BVD)Bovine Leukosis Virus (BLV)

Page 22: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Human ThreatsZoonoses

E.coli

Salmonella

Cryptosporidi

a

Giardia

Traders City, 2009University of California, Davis, 1995

Page 23: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

NYC Watershed Interest

Cryptosporidia Giardia

University of California, Davis, 1995Collick, et al., 2006; Mark-Carew, et al., 2010

Gonzalez, 2002Caduceus Newsletter, 2004

Page 24: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Summary of Benefits

Farms, Animals, Environment, &

People

Page 25: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Farms

Stress Immunity

Pathogen Transfer Early health

Calf mortality Productivity of the animal

INCREASEDECREASE

Cornell University, 2011d

Page 26: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Animals

Farm animals

Pets

Wildlife

Halliburton Farms, 2006

Page 27: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Environment

Manure spreading

Pathogen runoff

Wildlife

Free George, 2011

Page 28: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

People

Pathogen transfer Clean water

Pathogen infection Survivability

Water-borne disease Appreciation of farm efforts

DECREASE INCREASE

DEP, 2011

Page 29: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

ConclusionMANAGEMENT

Record keeping

Recognition

Suggestions

Farm efforts

Walker, 2010b

Page 30: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Questions

Penn State University, 2007

Page 31: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Local ResourcesCornell Cooperative Extension of Delaware County

Website: http://www.ccedelaware.org/Home.aspxTelephone: (607) 865-6531

Delaware County Soil and Water Conservation DistrictWebsite: http://www.dcswcd.org/Telephone: 607-865-7161

New York City Department of Environmental ProtectionWebsite: http://www.nyc.gov/html/dep/html/home/home.shtml

Page 32: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Additional ResourcesNew York State Cattle Health Assurance Program

http://nyschap.vet.cornell.edu/

United States Department of AgricultureAnimal Disease Traceability: http://www.aphis.usda.gov/traceability/

Clinical Textbook for Veterinary TechniciansAuthor: Dennis M. McCurnin

Penn State University Cooperative Extensionhttp://extension.psu.edu/production-agriculture/dairy

Page 33: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

ReferencesCatskill Watershed Corporation. (2005). A brief history. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from http://cwconline.org/about/ab_hist.html.Circle of Blue. (2009). Infographic: Ten things you should know about water. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from

http://www.circleofblue.org/waternews/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/waterinfo.pdf.Collick, A.S., Fogarty, E.A., Ziegler, P.E., Walter, M.T., Bowman, D.D., and T. S. Steenhuis. (2006). Survival of

cryptosporidium parvum oocysts in calf housing facilities in the New York City watersheds. Journal of Environmental Quality, 35, 680-587. Doi: 10.2134/jeq2005.0273.

Cornell University. (2011a, February). Healthy herds: Cattle health program helps herds and humans. ‘Scopes Magazine. Retrieved from http://www.vet.cornell.edu/news/documents/Scopes_FEB11_FLtoPrint.pdf.Cornell University. (2011b). 2011 Herd health and nutrition conferences. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from http://www.ansci.cornell.edu/prodairy/HHNC/proceedings/2011CompleteProceedings.pdf.Cornell University. (2011c). Interactions of health, disease, and nutrition in dairy calves. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from http://www.abc.cornell.edu/prodairy/HHNC/proceedings/HHNC2011.4.Nydam.pdf.Cornell University. (2011d). Taking the long view: Treat them nice as babies and they will be better adults.Curtis, C.R., Scarlett, J.M., Erb, H.N., White, M.E. (1988). Path model of individual-calf risk factors for calfhood morbidity and mortality in New York holstein herds. Preventative Veterinary Medicine, 6, 43-62.Hilson, J., & T. Westenbroek. (2003a). Day one- Newborn calves. Calf Management Newsletter, 1(1), p. 1-2.Hilson, J., & T. Westenbroek. (2003b). Replacement housing- young calves. Calf Management Newsletter, 1(3), p. 1-2.Land O’ Lakes. (2010). Biosecurity in calf management. Mark-Carew, M.P., Khan, Y., Wade, S.E., Schaaf, S. & H.O. Mohammed. (2010). Incidence of and risks associated with Giardia infections in herds on dairy farms in the New York City Watershed. ACTA Veterinaria Scandinavica, 52(44), p.1-8.

Page 34: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

ReferencesMoeller, D. W. (2005). Environmental health (3rd ed.). Boston: Harvard University Press.New York City Department of Environmental Protection [NYCDEP]. (2011). Regulatory background. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from http://www.nyc.gov/html/dep/html/watershed_protection/regulatory_background.shtmlPennsylvania State University. (2008). Calf health: Birth to weaning. Retrieved on April 14, 2011 from

http://www.das.psu.edu/research-extension/dairy/capitalregion/newsletter/articles/df-200711-04Sirois, M. (2004). Principles and practice of veterinary technology (2nd ed.). St. Louis: Mosby, Inc.Starkey, S.R., Kimber, K.R., Wade, S.E., Schaaf, S.L., White, M.E., & H.O. Mohammed. (2006). Risk factors associated with Cryptosporidium infection on dairy farms in a New York State watershed. Journal of Dairy Science,89, 4229-4236.United States Environmental Protection Agency [USEPA]. (2010). Filtration avoidance. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from http://www.epa.gov/region2/water/nycshed/filtad.htm.University of California, Davis. (1995). Cryptosporidium parvum and cattle: Implications for public health and land use restrictions. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from http://www.nal.usda.gov/wqic/printPHP2.phpWatershed Agricultural council [WAC]. (2010a). East of Hudson. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from

http://www.nycwatershed.org/ag_eastofhudson.html.WAC. (2010b). Watershed agricultural program 2009 annual report and 2010 workload for the New York City Catskill/Delaware and Croton Watersheds. Retrieved on April 12, 2011 from http://www.nycwatershed.org/pdfs/2009WAPannualReportCompressed.pdf.

Page 35: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Image ReferencesCaduceus Newsletter. (2004). Cryptosporidium. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.cbu.edu/~seisen/CadSu0402.htm.Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC]. (2011). Clostridium perfringens. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.cdc.gov/foodborneburden/clostridium-perfringens.html.Cheeseman, J. (2011). Croton lake gate house. New York City Department of Environmental Protection.Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.nyc.gov/html/dep/html/watershed_protection/index. shtml.Gonzalez, A. (2002). Giardia lamblia and giardiasis. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.sierranaturenotes .com/naturenotes/Giardia.htmGrowing Notes. (2003). E.coli. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://aerogreen.tripod.com/notes.htmHalliburton Farms. (2006). Getting to you’re your new friend. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.britishwhite.com/powarchive12.htmJongo News. (2007). Severely polluted lakes and rivers in China. Retrieved on April 21, 2011 from http://www.jongonews.com/articles/07/0821/30781/MzA3ODEsRqd5Uv4.htmlKansas State University. (2003). Integrating biosecurity practices into livestock management production. Retrieved on May 16, 2011 from http://www.vet.ksu.edu/ce/archive/2003/biosecurity.htmMallorie’s Dairy, Inc. (2010). Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.malloriesdairy.com/photo_tour.htm.Nicole, C. (2011). Rainbow over the east basin of the Ashokan Reservoir. New York City Department of Environmental Protection. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.nyc.gov/html/dep/html/watershed_protection/index. shtml.

Page 36: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Image ReferencesNYSCHAP. (2009). Logo. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://nyschap.vet.cornell.edu/module/leukosis/section1/leukosis1.asp.Penn State University. (2007). Calf management tips for cold weather. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.das.psu.edu/research-extension/dairy/dairy-digest/articles/dd200712-04Southern Nevada Water Authority. (2011). Safe drinking water act. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.snwa.com/html/wq_sdwa.html.Squash Blossom Farm. (2009). Jersey Calves. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://squashblossomfarm.blogspot.com/2009/04/jersey-calves.html.The Free George. (2011). The fight for clean water: Agribiz vs. environmentalists. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://thefreegeorge.com/thefreegeorge/clean-water-agribiz-versus-environmentalists/.Traders City. (2009). Cow manure. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.traderscity.com/board/products-1/offers-to-sell-and-export-1/cow-manure-fertilizer-exporters-indian-suppliers-79619/.UK Agriculture. (2011). http://www.ukagriculture.com/livestock/calf_housing_health.cfmUniversity of Minnesota Extension. (2011). Clean feeding utensils help keep calves healthy. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www1.extension.umn.edu/dairy/calves-and-heifers/clean-feeding-utensils-help-keep-calves-healthy/index.html.USEPA. (2005). Ag 101: Dairy production. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://www.p2pays.org/ref/02/01244/www.epa.gov/agriculture/ag101/printdairy.html.

Page 37: The Benefits of Dairy Calf Health Management within the New York City Watershed Elizabeth Walker, MPH student Walden University PUBH 6165-2 Instructor:

Image ReferencesWalker, E. (2005). Feeding dairy calves.Walker, E. (2010). Riverdale barn.Welsh Lamb and Beef Producers. (2009). Welsh lamb & beef producers animal health plan. Retrieved on April 24, 2011 from http://healthplan.wlbp.co.uk/wlbp/AHPInfo.aspx.


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