32. Keep Livestock Out Of Water |
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By cutting off the access of livestock to streams and ponds with
fencing, you reduce your animals' contact with waterborne bacteria
that can cause bovine leptospirosis, mastitis, and other ailments.
It also reduces the risk of leg injury, which can occur when livestock
walk on crumbling banks.
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The
buffer zone of vegetation growing between the fence and stream provides
erosion-control, as does keeping livestock away from the streambank.
In Ohio, researchers found that fencing cattle away from a stream
cut soil erosion by 40 percent and reduced the amount of sediment
reaching the stream by 50 percent. |
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Use
multistrand, high-tensile fences, which can be electrified. There
is less risk of the fence being washed out than with ordinary woven
wire fences. For interior paddock fences, animals accustomed to electric
fences can often be controlled by one strand of wire. |
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In
providing an alternative water supply to your animals, use a pressure
tank in the system because it reduces the cycling of the pump. Rapid,
repeated cycling reduces the life of the pump motor and pumping efficiency. |
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