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Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy

BACKGROUND: This study was performed to demonstrate the widespread distribution and severity of selenium (Se) deficiency in sheep flocks and to evaluate the impact of influencing factors. In 150 flocks, ten serum samples of adult ewes were analysed for Se concentration. The farmers were interviewed...

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Autores principales: Humann-Ziehank, Esther, Tegtmeyer, Philip C, Seelig, Bjoern, Roehrig, Petra, Ganter, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177125/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24245607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1751-0147-55-82
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author Humann-Ziehank, Esther
Tegtmeyer, Philip C
Seelig, Bjoern
Roehrig, Petra
Ganter, Martin
author_facet Humann-Ziehank, Esther
Tegtmeyer, Philip C
Seelig, Bjoern
Roehrig, Petra
Ganter, Martin
author_sort Humann-Ziehank, Esther
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: This study was performed to demonstrate the widespread distribution and severity of selenium (Se) deficiency in sheep flocks and to evaluate the impact of influencing factors. In 150 flocks, ten serum samples of adult ewes were analysed for Se concentration. The farmers were interviewed concerning flock size, provision of mineral supplement, predominant form of husbandry (stationary fenced pasture/transhumance), predominant form of water provision (tap water/well/surface water) and predominant soil (sandy, silty/loamy, clay) in the area. The location of the flock was recorded as well as the production stage/season at the time of sampling. Intra-group variation and the validity to analyse pooled samples were tested. RESULTS: Pools of five samples correlated well with the mean of individually analysed samples. The intra-group range of serum Se concentration varied enormously (mean 45.4 ± 18.8 μg Se/l). About 60% of the flocks showed mean serum Se concentrations below 80 μg/l, 37.4% were below 60 μg Se/l, representing a Se deficient stage. Using mineral supplement in general was no key factor for Se status. Stationary flocks on fenced pasture had constantly higher mean serum Se concentrations during breeding (outdoors, August-November), lambing (mainly indoors, December-March) and lactation (outdoors, April-July), whereas flocks practising transhumance had significantly lower Se status, except during lambing. There was no significant correlation between the soil type and the Se status, but flocks in Southern Germany tend to show a lower Se status compared to Central and Northern Germany. Increasing flock size was associated with lower mean serum Se concentrations. In stationary flocks only, the use of surface water was accompanied by significantly lower Se status. CONCLUSION: Se deficiency is widespread in German sheep flocks. More than one third of the flocks showed Se deficiency, indicating the need to optimise the nutritional management. Factors raising suspicion of Se deficiency are large flocks, transhumance during lactation and the breeding season as well as surface water provision in stationary flocks.
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spelling pubmed-41771252014-09-28 Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy Humann-Ziehank, Esther Tegtmeyer, Philip C Seelig, Bjoern Roehrig, Petra Ganter, Martin Acta Vet Scand Research BACKGROUND: This study was performed to demonstrate the widespread distribution and severity of selenium (Se) deficiency in sheep flocks and to evaluate the impact of influencing factors. In 150 flocks, ten serum samples of adult ewes were analysed for Se concentration. The farmers were interviewed concerning flock size, provision of mineral supplement, predominant form of husbandry (stationary fenced pasture/transhumance), predominant form of water provision (tap water/well/surface water) and predominant soil (sandy, silty/loamy, clay) in the area. The location of the flock was recorded as well as the production stage/season at the time of sampling. Intra-group variation and the validity to analyse pooled samples were tested. RESULTS: Pools of five samples correlated well with the mean of individually analysed samples. The intra-group range of serum Se concentration varied enormously (mean 45.4 ± 18.8 μg Se/l). About 60% of the flocks showed mean serum Se concentrations below 80 μg/l, 37.4% were below 60 μg Se/l, representing a Se deficient stage. Using mineral supplement in general was no key factor for Se status. Stationary flocks on fenced pasture had constantly higher mean serum Se concentrations during breeding (outdoors, August-November), lambing (mainly indoors, December-March) and lactation (outdoors, April-July), whereas flocks practising transhumance had significantly lower Se status, except during lambing. There was no significant correlation between the soil type and the Se status, but flocks in Southern Germany tend to show a lower Se status compared to Central and Northern Germany. Increasing flock size was associated with lower mean serum Se concentrations. In stationary flocks only, the use of surface water was accompanied by significantly lower Se status. CONCLUSION: Se deficiency is widespread in German sheep flocks. More than one third of the flocks showed Se deficiency, indicating the need to optimise the nutritional management. Factors raising suspicion of Se deficiency are large flocks, transhumance during lactation and the breeding season as well as surface water provision in stationary flocks. BioMed Central 2013-11-19 /pmc/articles/PMC4177125/ /pubmed/24245607 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1751-0147-55-82 Text en Copyright © 2013 Humann-Ziehank et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Humann-Ziehank, Esther
Tegtmeyer, Philip C
Seelig, Bjoern
Roehrig, Petra
Ganter, Martin
Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy
title Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy
title_full Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy
title_fullStr Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy
title_full_unstemmed Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy
title_short Variation of serum selenium concentrations in German sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy
title_sort variation of serum selenium concentrations in german sheep flocks and implications for herd health management consultancy
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4177125/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24245607
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1751-0147-55-82
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