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Internal Parasite Evaluation and Control

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(egg/g) in Spanish wether goats. 10 Oct. 15 Oct. 20 Oct. 25 Oct. 1 Nov. 5 Nov. 10 Nov. ... 1. Warm weather. 2. Two inches of rain in a month. 3. Grazing pastures short ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Internal Parasite Evaluation and Control


1
Internal Parasite Evaluation and Control
  • Steve Hart
  • American Institute for Goat Research
  • Langston University

2
E. Kika De la Garza American Institute for Goat
Research
  • Research Program
  • Nutrition
  • Vegetation Mgt.
  • Parasites
  • Economics
  • Carcass Quality

3
Extension Program
  • Field Day April 29, 2007 at Langston University
  • Mini Field Day February in NE and SW OK
  • Buck Test with OMGA May-Aug

4
Extension Workshops
  • Nutrition
  • Birthing
  • Goat Management
  • Parasites
  • Artificial Insemination
  • Contact your county agent

5
Fencing Garden
6
Web Site WWW2.luresext.edu
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9
Topics
  • Parasite life cycle
  • Management to prevent parasites
  • Dewormer resistance
  • Developing a workable parasite control program

10
Roundworms
  • Barber pole worm, Haemonchus contortus- feeds on
    blood in abomasum, causes anemia, poor
    performance and death

11
Barberpole Worm
12
  • Barber pole worms in the abomasum

13
Roundworms
  • Bankrupt worm, Trichostrongylus colubriformis,
    feeds on mucus in small intestine, diarrhea,
    reduced appetite, poor performance
  • Brown stomach worm, Teledorsagia circumcincta or
    Ostertagia, feeds on gastric glands, causes
    diarrhea, reduced appetite, poor performance

14
Worm life cycle
  • Life cycle is very important to understand so you
    know some actions to take to reduce worm problems
    and also, why some environmental conditions or
    management practices increase worm problems so
    that you can be alert for parasite problems

15
Life Cycle 2
  • Egg in feces from animal falls to ground
  • Requires warmth 50F and humidity to hatch to
    first stage larvae, abbreviated L-1 in 1-6 days
  • Winter parasites are less of a problem
  • Dry hot summer parasites are less of a problem

16
  • Roundworm egg

17
Life Cycle 3
  • Direct sunlight can heat fecal pellet to
  • 155 F and sterilize pellet
  • Diatomaceous earth helps pellet to dry out?
  • Shade trees and tall, dense grass increase
    humidity and shade fecal pellets from the sun

18
Life Cycle 4
  • L-1 eats bacteria in feces and grows, molts
    (sheds skin like a snake) and becomes L-2
  • L-1 and L2 are subject to dying by drying out.
    Heat and low humidity will kill them in the pellet

19
Life Cycle
  • L-2 eats bacteria in feces and grows and molts to
    L-3. However, the cuticle (skin) is not shed, so
    the L-3 has 2 layers of cuticle. This makes the
    L-3 much more resistant to drying out.

20
  • Note how the old cuticle is surrounding the L3
    stage
  • This means the L3 cant feed and must rely on
    stored metabolites or energy to survive

21
Life Cycle 5
  • However, the L-3 cannot eat, because his mouth is
    covered. He must live off his stored reserves.
    He can only live about 30-60 days in hot weather
    or 120-240 days in cool weather.

22
Life Cycle 6
  • Takes about 6-14 days from fresh fecal pellet to
    L-3
  • The L-3 must escape from the fecal pellet to
    infect an animal
  • The L-3 can only live a few weeks inside a fecal
    pellet

23
Life Cycle 7
  • Pellet must be broken up by rain (2 inches in a
    months time) and then the larva scoots on a film
    of water (from rain or dew) 2-3 inches up forage
    or he may scoot under a fallen leaf or other
    debris.
  • Close grazing or goats picking up debris infects
    goats. Browsing goats pick up few larvae

24
  • L3 larvae caught in a dew droplet on a stem of
    grass

25
Life Cycle 8
  • Maybe only 3-10 of eggs end up as L-3 larvae on
    forage.
  • L-3 must be eaten by goat or sheep to continue
    development
  • L-3 inside goat leaves its sheath and molts to
    L-4.
  • L-4 can enter suspended animation called
    hypobiosis or arrested form

26
Life Cycle 9
  • Arrested form of L-4 does not stimulate animals
    immune system and often requires a higher dose of
    dewormer
  • Barber pole worm eggs and larvae are killed by
    freezing it overwinters as arrested L-4 and
    survives hot dry summers as an L-4 in the goat
  • Otherwise L-4 molts to L-5 which is adolescent
    which develops ovaries and uterus and then molts
    to an adult which lays thousands of eggs per day

27
Immune Response
  • Good nutrition stimulates immune system
  • Can select goats for low fecal egg counts
  • Other diseases which depress immune system (e.g.
    coccidiosis) can cause increased worm problems

28
Life Cycle 11
  • When goat are lactating, immune system is
    suppressed and does not fight parasites.
    Arrested L-4 larvae acquired during the fall all
    mature simultaneously in the spring during
    lactation. Rationale for deworming before kidding

29
Barber Pole Worm
  • Dominant species in warm climates
  • Produces 1-6,000 eggs/day
  • Develops dewormer resistance more rapidly than
    other species because of 3 wk generation interval.

30
Symptoms of Barber Pole Worm
  • Barber pole worm consumes 1-5 drops of blood per
    day. 1,000 nearly a pint of blood in a week.
  • Causes anemia (low red blood cell number),
    hypoproteinemia (low blood protein), edema and
    ultimately death
  • Blood is normally 36 red blood cells
  • Deworm when 20 red blood cells
  • Goat is at deaths door at 8 red blood cells
  • Coccidiosis, liver flukes, and lice can cause
    anemia

31
Symptoms of Barber Pole Worm
  • Look at color of mucous membranes-under lower
    eyelid, gums, inside vulva. Dark pink color is
    good, pale watery color indicates anemia
  • Make a habit of noticing animals with white
    around eyes
  • Bottle jaw, a collection of fluid (edema) under
    the lower jaw

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34
Symptom of Barber Pole Worm
  • Fecal egg counts are the best measure of barber
    pole worm infection, reflecting the number of
    mature worms in the goat. Takes 1-3 weeks from
    L-3 to egg laying adult-it is possible to
    accumulate enough worms to have anemia and fecal
    egg count not yet increased. Is rare.

35
Dewormer Action Families
  • All members of an action family share the same
    mode of action despite there being several
    members in the same family
  • Only 3 broad spectrum families available
  • Benzamidoles
  • Levamisole and Morantel/Pyrantel
  • Avermectins/Milbemycins

36
Benzamidoles
  • fenbendazole (Panacur, Safeguard) oxfendazole
    (Synanthic)
  • albendazole (Valbazen) also kills flukes
  • All kill eggs, lungworms and tapeworms
  • Greatest level of dewormer resistance because of
    long history of use

37
Levamisole Morantel/Pyrantel
  • Levamisole (Tramisol, Levasole,Prohibit)
  • Morantel/Pyrantel (Rumatel, Positive Pellet
    Dewormer)
  • Basically only effective against roundworms

38
Avermectins/Milbemycins
  • Ivermectin (Ivomec)
  • Dormectrin (Dectomax)
  • Eprinomectin (Eprinex)
  • Moxidectin (Cydectin) long residual effect
  • Effective against roundworms, sucking lice and
    mange

39
Use of Dewormers
  • Few are approved for use in goats
  • Use 1.5 times the sheep dose because goats have
    faster rate of passage and larger livers to
    metabolize the drug
  • Administer orally back behind tongue so they go
    to the rumen

40
Use of Dewormers
  • Do not return to same pasture but send to new
    uncontaminated pasture
  • Observe withdrawal period before selling goat
  • Pour-on works poorly in goats
  • Dewormers should not be injected

41
Dewormer Resistance
  • An effective dewormer will reduce fecal egg
    counts by 95 7-14 days after giving the
    dewormer
  • Fecal Egg Count before deworming 1,000 eggs per
    gram
  • 10 days after deworming 200 eggs per gram 80
    fecal egg count reduction

42
Langston -ivermectin
Reduction 43
43
Oklahoma Farm FECR
  • Farm IVM VAL LEV CYD
  • 1 12 87 98
  • 2 37 88 99
  • 3 7 67 99
  • 4 63 85 92
  • 5 55 99 100
  • 6 46 42 98
  • 7 41 91
  • 8 0 97
  • 9 69 74 94

44
Dewormer Resistance
  • Biggest threat to the goat industry in the near
    future 3-5 years
  • Means we will have to rely on techniques other
    than dewormers to control worms
  • Knowledge about dewormer resistance and
    management to control parsites has doubled in the
    last 10 years and your vet may not be up to date

45
Management to Reduce Parasite Problems
  • 1. Stocking rates lt 2 hd/ acre
  • 2. Grazing cattle or horses with goats
  • 3. Dont graze close to ground
  • 4. Haymaking or tillage
  • 5. Pasture rotation with 6 or more weeks rest
  • 6. Browse or animals eating off ground

46
Concept for Selective Treatment
  • All goats do not carry the same worm burden.
    Some goats are more resistant to worms than
    others. We should deworm only those goats that
    need it. The goats that didnt get dewormed will
    have susceptible worms to dilute the resistant
    worms of the animals that were dewormed.

47
Distribution of FEC in Goat Herds
33 of Goats 80 of Eggs
48
Selective Treatment Protocol
  • Examine each goat individually every 3 weeks
    during the warm season.
  • Use eye color chart to determine those that are
    anemic and need dewormed.
  • Deworm and record the animals number.
  • Requires training to understand and implement
    concept.
  • Method is called FAMACHA

49
Consequences of Selective Treatment
  • Reduces rate of development of dewormer
    resistance
  • Culling goats that need dewormed the most
    increases resistance of goat herd to parasites
    and reduces number of infective larvae on a
    pasture (from eggs hatching)

50
Alternative Dewormer Research
  • With the development of dewormer resistance, the
    goat industry may find itself without an
    effective drug dewormer. There is an increasing
    amount of dewormer research on alternatives so
    that we do have some way to control worms when
    this happens.
  • Two studies at Langston have shown that Sericia
    lespedeza is effective at controlling worms in
    goats.

51
Effect of Sericea lespedeza on FEC (egg/g) in
Spanish wether goats
Pasture
Pasture
Lespedeza
Lespedeza
10 Oct. 15 Oct. 20 Oct. 25
Oct. 1 Nov. 5 Nov. 10 Nov.
52
Effect of Sericea lespedeza on Egg Production and
Development
  • Item Grass Sericea
  • __________________________________
  • FEC 2722 956
  • Eggs/d, 1000 1730 450
  • Hatch 99 58
  • Larvae/10g feces 2518 126

53
Alternative Dewormer Research
  • Capsules of copper wires
  • Protein supplementation
  • Trace mineral boluses
  • Herbal dewormers
  • Garlic, wormwood fennel, ginger

54
Risk Factors for Parasites
  • 1. Warm weather
  • 2. Two inches of rain in a month
  • 3. Grazing pastures short
  • 4. High stocking rates
  • 5. Thin animals
  • 6. Animals in lactation
  • 7. Long residence on a pasture

55
Planning a Parasite Control Program
  • 1. Monitor parasite problems with fecal egg
    counts or eye scores
  • 2. When you have a parasite problem determine
    why and change parts of management that you can
  • 3. Only use dewormer when necessary
  • 4. Deworm only animals that need it
  • 5. Cull wormy animals

56
Planning a Parasite Control Program
  • 6. Deworm new animals coming on your place with 2
    classes of dewormer
  • 7. Notice eye mucous membrane color when you
    check animals
  • 8. Use good nutrition

57
Langston Parasite Workshop
  • Parasite life cycle and management
  • Dewormers, resistance and proper use
  • Eye color scores (includes hands-on)
  • How to do your own fecal egg counts
  • Schedule one in your area by working with your
    County Agent to contact me

58
Conclusion
  • If you plan to stay in the goat business for the
    long term, you need to put more thought into how
    we raise our goats so we can reduce worm problems
    with management and only use dewormers when
    necessary.
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