There are way more than just two diseases that are common in cattle. Coccidiosis and Shipping Fever are two common ones, as well as Blackleg, BVDV, Acidosis, Bloat, Pneumonia (or BRD), Wooden Tongue, Mastitis, etc.
Respiratory diseases such as BRD (Bovine Respiratory Disease which covers shipping fever and pneumonia) is the most common disease that cattle die from. Digestive diseases come in second.
Depends on what diseases the cattle had and whether they were transmissible to humans or not.
Dairy cattle can get the same diseases and external/internal parasites as beef cattle, but some are more common in dairy cattle than beef cattle. Common diseases include: - Mastitis - Ketosis - Milk Fever - Foot Rot - Bloat - Displaced abomasum - Cattle Lice - Coccidiosis - Anaplasmosis - Vibrosis - Blackleg - Anthrax - Shipping Fever - Warts - Calf Scours - Ringworm - Pneumonia
H. G. Belschner has written: 'Horse diseases' -- subject(s): Horses, Diseases 'Cattle diseases' -- subject(s): Diseases, Cattle
There are a few diseases that can hop from cattle to goats, but they are relatively few. For the most part, you can pasture goats and cattle together and not worry about disease transmission between the two.
Neelesh Sharma has written: 'Production diseases of dairy animals' -- subject(s): Dairy cattle, Cattle, Metabolism, Parturition, Diseases
J. M. Payne has written: 'Metabolic and nutritional diseases of cattle' -- subject(s): Cattle, Diseases, Metabolism, Nutrition
Common diseases in Beef cattle: Leptospirosis, black leg, bloat, foot rot, pneumonia, scours, mastitis, milk fever, twisted stomach, white muscle disease. Common diseases in sheep and goats: Black leg, scours, bloat, foot rot, mastitis, rectal and vaginal prolapse.
Because they had diseases.
Cattle may carry the organisms that cause anthrax, European tick-borne encephalitis, rabies, tapeworm, Salmonella infections and many bacterial and viral diseases.
Atherosclerosis, and stroke are my guesses.
Ringworm and Athlete's Foot.