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Teeth, tags, and a TSE

Teeth, tags, and a TSE. SUSAN SCHOENIAN Sheep & Goat Specialist Western Maryland Research & Education Center University of Maryland Extension www.sheepandgoat.com sschoen@umd.edu (301) 432-2767 x343. Today’s topics. Teeth Mouthing sheep and goats to estimate age

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Teeth, tags, and a TSE

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  1. Teeth, tags, and a TSE SUSAN SCHOENIANSheep & Goat SpecialistWestern Maryland Research & Education CenterUniversity of Maryland Extensionwww.sheepandgoat.comsschoen@umd.edu(301) 432-2767 x343

  2. Today’s topics • Teeth • Mouthing sheep and goats to estimate age • Mouthing sheep and goats to determine soundness • Tags • Methods of identifying sheep and goats • Ear tagging basics • TSE • Scrapie in sheep and goats • Tagging requirements

  3. Mature sheep and goats have 32 teethLambs and kids have 20 temporary teeth Dental padno teeth MolarsBack teeth Incisors(front teeth) Picture source: Merck Veterinary Manual, 8th edition

  4. Mouthing sheep and goats to estimate age • < 1 • 1-2 • 2-3 • 3-4 • > 4 • Old • You can estimate the approximate age of sheep and goats by determining the age at which the milk teeth are replaced by permanent incisors. • Age varies by individual animal, breed, environment, and nutrition. Source for illustrations: Adapted from Vatta et al. (2005) Goatkeepers' Veterinary Manual.

  5. Lamb – less than 1 year of age Baby teeth Milk teeth All temporary

  6. Yearling (1-2 years) 1 pair

  7. 2 to 3 year old 2 pairs

  8. 3 to 4 year old 3 pairs

  9. 4-5 years old – solid mouth 4 pairs

  10. 7-8 year old – Solid mouth < 4 pairs

  11. 10-11 year old broken mouth

  12. 11+ years old“Gummer”

  13. Jawabnormalities

  14. Another way to tell how old a sheep is Lamb, > 12 months 2 break joints Yearling, 13-24 monthsspool and/or break joints Mature sheep, > 2 years 2 spool joints

  15. Identifying sheep and goats • Permanent • Ear tags • Tattoos • Ear notches • Electronic ID • Temporary • Neck chains or collars • Paint brands • Paint sprays • Markers or paint sticks

  16. Ear tagging basics Proper tags Proper tool

  17. Ear tagging basics Proper restraint Proper placement

  18. How to reduce ear tag infections • Tag young animals • Tag clean, dry ears • Tag when humidity is low. • Use smaller tag • Avoid metal tags • Punch a hole in the ear before inserting tag

  19. How to reduce ear tag infections • Apply lubricating antiseptic to male and female parts of tag • Dip in iodine • Soak ear tags in alcohol or another disinfectant before inserting. • Cut out infected tags

  20. How to reduce tag losses • Insert tag 1 to 2 inches from skull • Thicker part of ear • Less snagging • Put female part of tag on inside of ear • Less snagging • Avoid large veins

  21. What to do if animal loses a tag • 4-H tag • Contact 4-H office • Scrapie ID • Put in a new scrapie tag • Own flock/herd • Flock/herd of origin • Write down old number and new number • Registration tag • Replace with a tag with the same number

  22. [TSE] Scrapie • Disease of sheep and goats. • Affects central nervous system. • Animals over 18 months of age • Always fatal. • Member of a family of diseases called transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSEs). • Other TSEs • Mad cow disease • Chronic wasting disease • Creutzfeldt-Jakob’s disease

  23. How does a sheep or goat get scrapie? • Direct contact with an infected sheep or goat. • Direct contact with infected placenta. • Environmental contamination (?)

  24. Can all sheep and goats get scrapie? • Affects mostly blackface and speckled-faced sheep. • Few cases in goats in U.S. • A sheep’s genetics determines if it will get scrapie if it is exposed. • R gene - resistance • Q gene - susceptibility • They are still looking for resistant genotypes in goats.

  25. -- MANDATORY --Tagging requirement for scrapie program • Tag all sheep and goats when they leave your property. • Sell to neighbor • Go to weigh-in and tagging • Go to fair • Go to sale barn • Tag should be applied at the farm where the goat or sheep was born. Premise ID Individual animal ID Why? To trace back infected animals to their farm of origin and find other animals that might have been exposed.

  26. Tattoo instead of ear tag • A flock ID and individual animal number can take the place of an ear tag. • A registration tattoo may also take the place of a tattoo if the animal accompanied by its registration paper.

  27. What if . . . ? • The sheep or goat you buy doesn’t have a scrapie tag? • The seller is required to tag the animal. • If the seller doesn’t provide a tag, tag the animal with another scrapie tag and record the seller’s name and address so you can prove the animal wasn’t born on your farm. • The sheep or goat loses its scrapie tag? • Put in another tag and record both tag numbers (lost and new).

  28. How to get FREE scrapie tags • Contact John T. Swann at (410) 349-9708 or John.C.Swann@aphis.usda.gov. • He will assign a Flock ID and order your free ear tags and pliers to apply them.

  29. Thank you for your attention. Questions?

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