Good on-farm biosecurity and accurate tracing of animal movement is not an option in today's world — it's an imperative, according to Federated Farmers president Katie Milne.
Positive tests for Mycoplasma bovis in herds in Hastings and Winton, and a suspected case in Ashburton, further underlined the need for farmers to treat biosecurity measures on their own properties as a top priority, she said.
The federation and other industry leaders remained committed to eradicating Mycoplasma bovis, but news that it had reached the North Island made that a bigger, if by no means impossible challenge.
"Don't rely on others to protect your patch. Protect it yourself. In the end, we are all biosecurity officers with a role to play," Ms Milne said.
Establishing a 1.5m buffer along fence lines with neighbouring properties should be standard practice, she added. Where practical that could be a vegetation buffer, which would deliver biosecurity and biodiversity benefits.