A new paper from a team of Cornell University researchers shows that the highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 virus causes severe mastitis and decreased milk production in dairy cows, a drop-off that may extend beyond the clinical outbreak period.
Economic losses due to decreased milk production, mortality and early removal from the herd were estimated at $950 per clinically affected cow for a total cost of approximately $737,500 for just the one herd the team studied. This did not include any ongoing herd dynamics or reproductive losses for this herd.
In a paper titled "The impact of influenza A H5N1 virus infection in dairy cows" published in Nature Communications, the researchers found cows clinically infected with HPAI presented a significantly increased risk of death and of premature removal from a herd of 3,876 adult cows in Ohio.
The most remarkable finding was the long duration of diminished milk production in clinically affected cows, said co-author Diego Diel, professor of virology and director of the Virology Laboratory at the Animal Health Diagnostic Center.