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Dead Calf
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<blockquote data-quote="Anonymous" data-source="post: 9041"><p>Did the calf smell or not at birth. If the calf stank, there were bacteria which had caused rotting of the calf, possibly after death or possibly the cause.Did the calf look normal? Did you feed moldy hay--can cause abortions. Viruses such as IBR, BVD or akabane can cause abortions such as this. I'd recommend talking with your vet, getting serology against brucellosis, lepto, IBR, BVD and whatever else they suggest now, and in 2 weeks if she survives to figure out the problem. This could certainly become a herd problem, best to see if it was infectious or preventable, or just an accident.Good Luck<br>V</p><p><br></p><p><br><hr size=4 width=75%><p></p><p></p><p></p><p> <a href="mailto:vcane@hurontario.net">vcane@hurontario.net</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Anonymous, post: 9041"] Did the calf smell or not at birth. If the calf stank, there were bacteria which had caused rotting of the calf, possibly after death or possibly the cause.Did the calf look normal? Did you feed moldy hay--can cause abortions. Viruses such as IBR, BVD or akabane can cause abortions such as this. I'd recommend talking with your vet, getting serology against brucellosis, lepto, IBR, BVD and whatever else they suggest now, and in 2 weeks if she survives to figure out the problem. This could certainly become a herd problem, best to see if it was infectious or preventable, or just an accident.Good Luck<br>V <br> <br><hr size=4 width=75%><p> [email=vcane@hurontario.net]vcane@hurontario.net[/email] [/QUOTE]
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