The first objective of this study was to determine whether differences would occur among teat end preparation techniques with regard to potential contamination of milk samples collected for bacterial culture. The second objective was to determine whether differences would be detected in genus or species of bacteria isolated from samples collected using the various methods as well as from contaminated or uncontaminated samples. Mammary quarter foremilk samples were collected from lactating dairy cattle at the University of Missouri Foremost Research Dairy Farm (Columbia). Four different teat end preparation methods were used to compare contamination rates in milk samples. Sampling techniques used before milk collection included (1) no preparation, (2) pre-milking disinfection and single-use towel drying of teats only, (3) scrubbing of the teat end with alcohol only, and (4) pre-milking disinfection, single-use towel drying, and scrubbing of the teat end with alcohol. Milk was plated on Columbia blood agar. Cultures were read at 48 h, with the number of morphologically different bacterial colony types quantified and isolated. Isolates were identified using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Median numbers of colony types were compared among groups using Kruskal-Wallis ANOVA with post-hoc pairwise comparisons, and proportional data were compared using the chi-squared test. A total of 168 cows, including 665 quarters, were sampled, and 1,614 isolates resulted. Analysis with MALDI-TOF identified 29 unique genera and 81 unique species among the samples. More contaminated samples occurred in groups 1 and 2 compared with groups 3 and 4. Group 3 had more contaminated samples than group 4. The majority of Pseudomonas spp. isolates were identified within group 2. When applying previously described niches to Staphylococcus spp., environmental species were more likely to be identified among contaminated samples, whereas host-adapted species were more likely to be identified among uncontaminated samples. These data confirm that scrubbing the teat end with alcohol after pre-milking disinfection with an iodine-based teat disinfectant and drying of the teat minimizes contamination of the milk sample.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.3168/jds.2019-17338DOI Listing

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