S.D. Admin. R. 12:68:23:03 - Monitored herd

A monitored herd is a herd under range conditions on which identification records are maintained for animals over one year of age that are slaughtered and inspected for tuberculosis at an approved state or federal slaughter facility or an approved laboratory. The animals slaughtered have been identified to the herd and the number slaughtered have been evenly distributed over a three-year period, at a rate to detect infection at a two percent prevalence level with ninety-five percent confidence. This rate requires a maximum number of 178 animals. See page 34 in "Bovine Tuberculosis Eradication," USDA, APHIS, January 22, 1999.

Notes

S.D. Admin. R. 12:68:23:03
21 SDR 162, effective 3/23/1995; 34 SDR 100, effective 10/22/2007.

General Authority: SDCL 40-3-14, 40-3-25, 40-3-26, 40-5-8.6.

Law Implemented: SDCL 40-3-14, 40-5-8, 40-5-8.2, 40-5-8.3, 40-5-8.4, 40-5-9.

"Bovine Tuberculosis Eradication," APHIS 91-45-011, January 22, 1999, published by Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture. Copies may be obtained at no charge from South Dakota Animal Industry Board, 411 South Fort Street, Pierre, South Dakota 57501.

State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.


No prior version found.