Subclinical mastitis in New Zealand grazing dairy ewes 2: Relationships among somatic cell count, California Mastitis Test, and milk culture, and risk factors for elevated aerobic plate count
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Date
2026-01-01
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Elsevier Inc on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association
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CC BY 4.0
(c) 2026 The Author/s
(c) 2026 The Author/s
Abstract
Our objectives were, in grazing dairy ewes, (1) to describe SCC, California Mastitis Test (CMT) score, and ewe-level milk aerobic plate count (APC), (2) to explore the relationship between CMT and SCC, (3) to identify risk factors for elevated APC, and (4) to find the optimal SCC threshold for diagnosis of IMI. Gland-level milk samples were collected from ∼15 randomly selected ewes on each of 20 New Zealand dairy sheep farms at early, mid, and late lactation in a repeated cross-sectional study. Aerobic bacterial culture and CMT (measured on a scale of 0, trace, 1, 2, or 3) were performed at the gland level, and SCC and APC at the ewe level using composite milk samples. Milk samples were collected from 893 ewes, 870 of which had complete SCC and culture data. Geometric mean SCC was 169,039 (95% CI: 153,921–185,641) cells/mL, varying between farms and decreasing across visits. A CMT score ≥1 in one or both glands occurred in 21.2% of ewes. Mean log10 SCC increased linearly with CMT score, but the correlation between the ewe's highest gland-level CMT score and SCC was moderate (Kendall's tau = 0.47, 95% CI 0.43–0.52). Bacteria were isolated from 86 (9.9%) ewes, with the most common bacteria being NAS (7.0% of glands) and Staphylococcus aureus (0.6% of glands). A SCC threshold of ∼400,000 cells/mL had the greatest Youden's index for diagnosing IMI using a single SCC measurement. The APC was below the limit of quantification (1 × 103 cfu/mL) in 78.0% of ewes, and <100 × 103 cfu/mL in 96.9% of ewes, and varied between visits and farms. Using a mixed Bayesian ordinal regression model, elevated CMT score and SCC, positive milk culture, and subclinical mastitis, but not udder asymmetry, were confirmed as risk factors for elevated APC. These findings provide baseline milk quality data for New Zealand grazing dairy ewes, confirm that udder health should be considered when investigating elevated bulk milk APC, and can be used to help producers manage SCC, subclinical mastitis, and APC, as well as informing further research. Findings specific to New Zealand's emerging sheep dairy industry offer a benchmark for pastoral systems internationally and highlight the importance of udder health to bulk milk quality.
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Keywords
mastitis, aerobic plate count, milk quality, sheep
Citation
Chambers G, Lawrence K, Grinberg A, Velathanthiri N, Ridler A, Laven R. (2026). Subclinical mastitis in New Zealand grazing dairy ewes 2: Relationships among somatic cell count, California Mastitis Test, and milk culture, and risk factors for elevated aerobic plate count. Journal of Dairy Science. 109. 1. (pp. 705-721).
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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as CC BY 4.0

