Ridgetop
Herd Master
If the abcess has opened, put on gloves and take a sample of the draining pus. Put the sample in a baggy and have it tested. This way you will have a quick test.
Do not use the buck while the abcess is open. There are other abcesses that are not CL, especially in sheep. Shearing nicks can cause abcesses, as can foxtails that get trapped and burrow through wool to the skin. That said, if any of our goats threw out what looked like an abcess lump, they were isolated and at the auction yard the next day.
To be safe, I would test the whole herd every year, for CL, Johne's, and of course, CAE. Then cull religiously. I have never heard though that meat goats were especially prone to CL more so than any other breeds. Sheep can also get CL, although abcesses on sheep are not always CL. UC Davis is a good lab. We used to use Washington State for our CAE blood draw testing. Most of the labs will FAX the results to you so you don't have to wait for a snail mail report.
Do not use the buck while the abcess is open. There are other abcesses that are not CL, especially in sheep. Shearing nicks can cause abcesses, as can foxtails that get trapped and burrow through wool to the skin. That said, if any of our goats threw out what looked like an abcess lump, they were isolated and at the auction yard the next day.
To be safe, I would test the whole herd every year, for CL, Johne's, and of course, CAE. Then cull religiously. I have never heard though that meat goats were especially prone to CL more so than any other breeds. Sheep can also get CL, although abcesses on sheep are not always CL. UC Davis is a good lab. We used to use Washington State for our CAE blood draw testing. Most of the labs will FAX the results to you so you don't have to wait for a snail mail report.