Popular search terms
  • Biosecurity toolkit
  • Contact us
  • What is biosecurity?
  • Farm Biosecurity Program
  • Plant pest responses
  • Animal disease response
  • Farm profiler
  • Toolkit
  • Subscribe
  • About
    • About the Farm Biosecurity Program
    • Emergency animal disease responses
    • Emergency plant pest responses
  • Essentials
    • Farm inputs
    • Farm outputs
    • Ferals & weeds
      • Wild dog biosecurity
    • People, vehicles & equipment
    • Production practices
    • Train, plan & record
    • Videos
  • Toolkit
    • Gate sign
    • Create your own biosecurity kit
    • Declarations
    • Manuals
    • On-farm biosecurity planning
    • Records
  • Crops
    • Cotton
      • Cotton best management practice
      • Cotton product management
      • Cotton pests
    • Feed mills
    • Fruit & nuts
      • Fruit & nut pests
        • Apple and pear pests
        • Avocado pests
        • Banana pests
        • Cherry pests
        • Citrus pests
        • Mango pests
        • Nut pests
        • Papaya pests
        • Summerfruit pests
      • Fruit & nut product management
    • Grains
      • Grains pests
      • Grains product management
      • Grain storage options
    • Honey bees
      • BeeAware website and newsletter
      • Code of Practice and National Bee Biosecurity Program
      • Honey bee glossary
      • Honey bee product management
      • Honey bee pests
      • Honey bee best management practice
      • Beekeeper advisory – mosquito insecticide control during the 2022 Japanese encephalitis outbreak
    • Nursery & garden
      • Nursery & garden pests
      • Nursery & garden product management
      • Nursery & garden best management practice
    • Onions
      • Onion pest threats
      • Onion pest eradication or control examples
    • Plantation forestry
      • Forestry biosecurity practices
      • Forestry pests
      • Hypothetical exotic bark beetle incursion
      • Plantation forestry quality assurance
    • Potatoes
      • Potato pest threats
      • Potato biosecurity areas
    • Sugarcane
      • Sugarcane best management practice
      • Sugarcane biosecurity essentials
      • Queensland Sugarcane Biosecurity Zones
      • Sugarcane pests and weeds
    • Vegetables
      • Vegetable pests
      • Vegetable product management
    • Viticulture
      • Phylloxera
      • Viticulture pests
      • Viticulture product management
  • Livestock
    • Alpacas
    • Beef cattle
    • Chickens
    • Dairy cattle
    • Ducks
    • Eggs
    • Feed mills
    • Goats
    • Horses
      • Mosquito Management for Horses
    • Lot feeding
    • New and emerging livestock industries
    • Pigs
      • Feeding your pigs
      • Controlling mosquitoes around piggeries
    • Ratites
    • Sheep
    • Zoo animals
  • Get help
    • Property biosecurity management planning
  • News
    • E-newsletter
    • Subscribe to Farm Biosecurity News
  • Stories
  • Videos

Livestock Health Concerns to be on the Lookout for this Summer

Print this page
  • Home
  • News
  • Livestock Health Concerns to be on the Lookout for this Summer

Livestock Health Concerns to be on the Lookout for this Summer

As a wet and warm summer arrives, parasites, bacteria and viruses are thriving on farms and amongst livestock. We’ve compiled a list of resources to help inform you about what signs and symptoms you should be on the lookout for, along with disease management insights and tactics. It’s important to know that some diseases can also spread to humans; be prepared and protect yourself as well as your livestock.

Parasites

Ticks & worms

When the weather gets drier over summer, ticks and worms tend to die off, however as La Niña continues these parasites are persisting longer than they traditionally do.

More information:

  • TickBoss “Vaccines and prevention” provides valuable insight for your livestock on best prevention methods.
  • WormBoss “Worm Control Program for Sheep” offers region-based programs focused on the prevention and management of worms.

Flystrike

Wet conditions can lead to fleece rot (wet, lumpy wool) which is a perfect breeding ground for flies. Flystrike is a painful and sometimes fatal condition where flies lay their eggs within clumps of wet wool and the resulting maggots hatch and eat the flesh of their host. With recent wet weather and floods, monitoring your sheep for signs of fleece rot and flystrike should be a top priority.

More information:

  • FlyBoss offers insight into monitoring for flystrike. Providing advice on preventative measures such as chemical application, crutching and shearing, and fly traps.
    See “The three recommended “times” for applying preventative treatment”

Vector-borne diseases

Arboviruses

Many vector-borne diseases, meaning diseases spread via other organisms like flies, mosquitos and other insects, are caused by “arboviruses” (viral infections spread via an arthropod host).

Key vector-borne diseases to look out for include:

  • Japanese encephalitis virus (JEv)
    The virus has a reservoir in water birds and infects pigs (a ‘multiplying host’), horses, as well as humans (for which vaccines are now available). If you work outdoors and consider yourself at risk, contact your general practitioner for advice.
    Download the Mosquito Management Plan – a useful tool that offers an integrated approach to monitoring and managing mosquitos around your environment.
  • Bovine ephemeral fever (BEF)
    Commonly known as three-day sickness, BEF is a disease of cattle and buffaloes, marked by short fever, shivering, lameness and muscular stiffness. Emerging from dry weather patterns means that herd immunity may be low, whereas the disease spreads during wet weather. A BEF vaccine is available and effective.
  • Equine infection anaemia (EIA)
    Spread by biting insects such as mosquitos and midges, EIA is an incurable disease sometimes seen in Queensland. With recent floods, insect management should be a top priority for horse owners.

Bacterial diseases

Virulent footrot

Endemic, notifiable disease caused by the bacterium Dichelobacter nodosus.

It is highly contagious and spreads quickly in warm, moist conditions. Virulent footrot causes acute, painful inflammation of the interdigital skin and eventually becomes deep-set within the hoof. Benign footrot is caused by a different ‘strain’ of the same bacterium, and usually causes mild irritation. Footrot mostly occurs in the spring/autumn seasons but may persist longer in wet conditions.

Botulism

A serious, fatal disease caused by a toxin produced by the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. This bacterium is widely distributed including in the gut of animals but may become a problem in some circumstances.

After a major flooding event, cattle may become exposed through decomposing carcases and decaying vegetation. Exposure increases the risk, especially in the case of a nutritional phosphorus/calcium deficiency. Vaccination is essential and nutritional management helps to reduce the likelihood of pica (gnawing on carcase bones). Botulism can also enter through deep wounds.

Hoof abscesses

Can impact any hoofed animal (pigs, sheep, horses, cattle). Any minor injury or damage to the hooves can become infected by bacteria. Exacerbated by wet, muddy conditions.

Mud fever

Pastern dermatitis in horses is often caused by a variety of bacteria, which thrive in muddy, wet conditions. The infection can stay dormant in the horse’s skin and becomes active when the surface is compromised, usually by prolonged exposure to wet conditions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read the latest information on
Foot-and-mouth disease

Read the latest information on
Lumpy skin disease

Read the latest information on
Japanese encephalitis

Subscribe to our newsletter

Farm Biosecurity News

Use our profiler to make your

Biosecurity Toolkit

Latest News
  • 30 April 2025

    Silent invaders: what to watch out for this season
  • 28 April 2025

    The role of growers in the national biosecurity system
  • 28 April 2025

    Protecting Australia’s livestock: the critical role of the Ruminant Feed Ban
  • 28 April 2025

    Prevent, protect, and show with confidence
  • 31 March 2025

    Australia’s national biosecurity system: ready when it matters the most

Emergency Animal Disease Hotline
1800 675 888

Exotic Plant Pest Hotline
1800 084 881

  • Sitemap
  • Copyright
  • Contact us
  • Privacy & Disclaimer
  • Website by Morph Digital