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Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden

Trials were conducted on 3 commercial sheep farms in Sweden to assess the effect of administering spores of the nematode trapping fungus, Duddingtonia flagrans, together with supplementary feed to lactating ewes for the first 6 weeks from turn-out on pastures in spring. Also control groups of ewes,...

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Autores principales: Waller, PJ, Ljungström, B-L, Schwan, O, Martin, L Rudby, Morrison, DA, Rydzik, A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1618959/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16722303
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1751-0147-47-23
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author Waller, PJ
Ljungström, B-L
Schwan, O
Martin, L Rudby
Morrison, DA
Rydzik, A
author_facet Waller, PJ
Ljungström, B-L
Schwan, O
Martin, L Rudby
Morrison, DA
Rydzik, A
author_sort Waller, PJ
collection PubMed
description Trials were conducted on 3 commercial sheep farms in Sweden to assess the effect of administering spores of the nematode trapping fungus, Duddingtonia flagrans, together with supplementary feed to lactating ewes for the first 6 weeks from turn-out on pastures in spring. Also control groups of ewes, receiving only feed supplement, were established on all 3 farms. Groups were monitored by intensive parasitological investigation. The ewes and their lambs were moved in late June to saved pastures for summer grazing, the lambs receiving an anthelmintic treatment at this time. After approximately 6 weeks on summer pasture the lambs were weaned, treated a second time with anthelmintic, and returned to their original lambing pastures for finishing. Decisions as to when lambs were to be marketed were entirely at the discretion of the farmer co-operators. No difference in lamb performance was found between the two treatments on all three farms. This was attributed to the high levels of nutrition initially of the ewes limiting their post-partum rise in nematode faecal egg counts in spring, which in turn resulted in low levels of nematode infection on pastures throughout the autumn period. Additionally, pastures were of good quality for the lambs during the finishing period, so they grew at optimal rates as far as the farmers were concerned.
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spelling pubmed-16189592006-10-24 Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden Waller, PJ Ljungström, B-L Schwan, O Martin, L Rudby Morrison, DA Rydzik, A Acta Vet Scand Original Article Trials were conducted on 3 commercial sheep farms in Sweden to assess the effect of administering spores of the nematode trapping fungus, Duddingtonia flagrans, together with supplementary feed to lactating ewes for the first 6 weeks from turn-out on pastures in spring. Also control groups of ewes, receiving only feed supplement, were established on all 3 farms. Groups were monitored by intensive parasitological investigation. The ewes and their lambs were moved in late June to saved pastures for summer grazing, the lambs receiving an anthelmintic treatment at this time. After approximately 6 weeks on summer pasture the lambs were weaned, treated a second time with anthelmintic, and returned to their original lambing pastures for finishing. Decisions as to when lambs were to be marketed were entirely at the discretion of the farmer co-operators. No difference in lamb performance was found between the two treatments on all three farms. This was attributed to the high levels of nutrition initially of the ewes limiting their post-partum rise in nematode faecal egg counts in spring, which in turn resulted in low levels of nematode infection on pastures throughout the autumn period. Additionally, pastures were of good quality for the lambs during the finishing period, so they grew at optimal rates as far as the farmers were concerned. BioMed Central 2006 2006-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC1618959/ /pubmed/16722303 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1751-0147-47-23 Text en
spellingShingle Original Article
Waller, PJ
Ljungström, B-L
Schwan, O
Martin, L Rudby
Morrison, DA
Rydzik, A
Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden
title Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden
title_full Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden
title_fullStr Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden
title_short Biological Control of Sheep Parasites using Duddingtonia flagrans: Trials on Commercial Farms in Sweden
title_sort biological control of sheep parasites using duddingtonia flagrans: trials on commercial farms in sweden
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1618959/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16722303
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1751-0147-47-23
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