Failure to vaccinate leads to cattle deaths
Lack of annual vaccinations leads to cattle deaths due to foot and mouth disease.
By : c. s. kotteswaran
Update: 2013-11-29 09:56 GMT
Chennai: Thousands of cows which recently died in the state due to foot and mouth disease were denied their regular annual vaccinations by farmers who feared loss of milk yield if their animals were vaccinated, a recent investigation by the Animal Husbandry Department revealed.
A few overzealous farmers, unaware of the impact in breeding hybrid cattle have also genetically weakened the livestock brood in Nagapattinam, Vellore and Thanjavur districts by cross breeding mostly foreign species, ignoring local indigenous varieties of south India, a senior official said.
It is also reported that a few carcasses of animals infected by foot and mouth disease were thrown into streams and this also increased the incidence of viral disease along the Cauvery delta districts, said a field official who added that the outbreak has been arrested.
“We are not denying the deaths in Nagapattinam, Myladuthurai and Vellore areas, but at the same time, the situation is under total control in all other districts. Awareness camps for vaccinations are conducted at grama panchayats and bio security measures are in place,” said a senior official.
Revenue and transport officials were informed not to permit the movement of cattle till mortality is brought down.
“Milk production in Tamil Nadu which has been growing steadily for the past three years is all set to decline due to the sporadic outbreak of foot and mouth disease among livestock.
Some relief should be provided by government to farmers who have lost their cattle,” opined Arupathy Kalyanam, general secretary, Federation of Farmers Association, Cauvery delta districts.
It is high time that government changes its breeding policy and indigenous species should be considered for breeding animals, he said.
According to a highly placed official, about 25,000 cattle could have died so far due to the outbreak, this being less than one per cent of the state’s total cattle population of '1.37 crore.