Prototheca cannot be cured by antibiotic treatment, so if tubes of dry cow treatment are contaminated when you administer them you can cause cows to become infected.
Other risk areas are areas of stagnant water on the farm that cows walk through, herd-housing situations or contaminated water sources.
Cows can pick an infection up either from the environment, or through cow-to-cow transmission in the milking shed.
Keep a look at for the warning signs of Prototheca infection in your herd, and make sure you get a culture on any cows that show the following signs: A high SCC with quarters that are going light, non-responsiveness to treatment, or on a herd level a bulk milk somatic cell count that keeps rising and/or a history of having to repeat treatments on mastitis cows.
There is very little known about the risk factors and prevalence of Prototheca specifically in New Zealand, however we do know that the impact an outbreak can have on a farmer and their herd is devastating.
So keep a close eye on your herd, do regular herd tests and milk sampling through your vet, and keep this nasty little bug in the back of your mind when dealing with unusual and difficult to treat cases of mastitis.