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Effect of daily infection with Ostertagia circumcincta larvae on food intake, milk production and wool growth in sheep

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2009

V. Leyva
Affiliation:
Lincoln College, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
A. E. Henderson
Affiliation:
Lincoln College, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
A. R. Sykes
Affiliation:
Lincoln College, University of Canterbury, New Zealand

Summary

Forty pregnant sheep were allocated to four groups and maintained indoors in individual pens on a pelleted diet. During the last 6 weeks of pregnancy and the first 6 weeks of lactation groups were infected daily with 4000 larvae of Ostertagia circumcincta or remained as controls in a cross-over design. Thus groups were either not infected (CC), infected only during pregnancy (IC), during lactation (CI) or during both pregnancy and lactation (II). Food was offered on the basis of body weight at the beginning of pregnancy and lactation. Food intake, body-weight change, faecal egg counts, plasma pepsinogen and milk production were measured weekly, wool growth and fibre diameter during 21-day periods and tensile strength of wool over the whole experimental period.

Eggs were seen in faeces of only three sheep infected during pregnancy, but in all sheep infected during lactation; maximum mean values were 467 ± 144 and 222 ± 58 eggs/g fresh faeces in CI and II sheep, respectively. Pepsinogen concentrations rose after 1 week of infection during pregnancy and lactation; peak values were 868 + 57 and 1104 ± 146 m-u/l, respectively.

Infection reduced food intake by 16% during lactation but had no effect during pregnancy. There were significant interactions between pregnancy and lactational treatments on intake during lactation. Infection during lactation increased bodyweight loss; mean values were 57, 40, 114 and 78 g/day for groups CC, IC, CI and II respectively. Milk production was decreased during weeks 4–6 of lactation, mean values being 1·59 and 1·32 kg/day in control and infected groups, respectively.

Infection reduced wool growth and wool fibre diameter by 20 and 7%, respectively, during the final 3 weeks of infection during lactation. The staple strength of wool grown during the experiment was reduced by 14, 45 and 23% in IC, CI and II groups, respectively. Infection moved the point of greatest wool tenderness from parturition in control sheep to a time during the period of infection, particularly when infection occurred during lactation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1982

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