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Facial eczema is a disease of the liver despite many people thinking it's a skin disease.
Severe sunburn and skin peeling are definitely clinical signs of facial eczema, but, it's the loss in milk production and lack of weight gain that really hit farmers in the pocket - up to $100,000 per year in some cases.
Only 5 per cent of cows will show clinical signs so even if you're not seeing sunburn on the animals, there's a good chance your herd is still being challenged.
Long term approaches to managing facial eczema include breeding facial eczema tolerant animals and growing pasture species that are less likely to host the spores, but the best short-term preventative is still using zinc - although not the stuff you stick on your nose.
Zinc can be given to stock directly as a bolus, as a drench or indirectly by mixing it with animal feed or water.
All methods have their pros and cons but the key to it all is monitoring.
Te Puke Vet Center can spore count your pasture samples and can blood test your animals for zinc levels.
Trials have shown that as few as 30 per cent of animals in a herd can have effective levels of zinc in their system despite the best efforts of a farmer.
My take home message from the discussion group was that the first step in getting control of facial eczema is getting your animals' blood tested to check the effectiveness of your own zinc treatment programme.