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Different grazing systems and their effect on survival of internal worms of cattleSilvina Fernández (Guelph, ON) This study was carried out to examine the survival of the infective larvae (L3) of Ostertagia ostertagi (the most important gastro-intestinal worm in cattle) on pasture under different simulated conditions of grazing: a) mixed grazing of cattle and nose-ringed sows, and b) grazing by cattle alone. Cattle feces contaminated with O. ostertagi eggs were deposited on three types of herbage plots: "tall herbage (TH) plots; "short herbage (SH) plots; and "short herbage/scattered feces" (SH/SF) plots.
Grass samples were taken every two weeks from each plot to determine
the presence and quantity of L3 that had migrated from feces onto pasture.
The grass samples were taken accordingly from the immediate area (named
"zone 2") surrounding the fecal pats up to 25 cm, as well as
from an extended area (named "zone 3") expanding a further 25 cm,
adjacent to the previous one. Once a month, some of the fecal pats were also collected to determine the number of L3 still present in the feces that had not yet migrated onto pasture. The numbers of L3 found in the fecal pats were higher in those from TH plots than in the other two groups and, furthermore, the larval counts in pats from SH plots were always higher than from SH/SF plots. Important differences were seen throughout the study from the biological
point of view; more L3 were able to survive in faeces on the TH plots,
presumably reflecting a better protection from heat and desiccation provided
by the green grass turf compared to those in the other plots, where there
was no green turf. The overall results support the idea that mixed grazing
of cattle and pigs favour the reduction of O. ostertagi larval levels
on pasture. This reduction is mainly due to the grazing behaviour of pigs,
which by grazing up to the very edge of the cattle faeces, will either
expose the larvae in faeces to adverse environmental summer conditions
or ingest cattle parasite larvae (which has no consequence at all for
the pigs), or both. |
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