Biological control of trichostrongylid infections in calves on pasture in Lithuania using Duddingtonia flagrans, a nematode-trapping fungus
Author | Affiliation | |
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Danish Centre for Experimental Parasitology, Institute for Veterinary Microbiology, The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Frederiksberg, Denmark | ||
Larsen, M | Danish Centre for Experimental Parasitology, Institute for Veterinary Microbiology, The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University, Frederiksberg, Denmark | |
Date |
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2000-04-01 |
The investigation was supported financially by Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO project TCP/LIT/6611), Christian Hansen BioSystems Ltd., and the Danish National Research Foundation. The authors wish to thank Alvydas Malakauskas, Lithuanian Veterinary Academy, Margrethe Pearman and Niels Midtgaard, Danish Centre for Experimental Parasitology, for their valuable assistance.
The effect on the pasture contamination level with infective trichostrongylid larvae by feeding the nematode-trapping fungus, Duddingtonia flagrans at two dose levels to first time grazing calves was examined in Lithuania. Thirty heifercalves, aged 3±6 months, were divided into three comparable groups, A, B and C. Each group was turned out on a 1.07 ha paddock (a, b and c). The paddocks were naturally contaminated with infective trichostrongylid larvae from infected cattle grazing the previous year. Fungal material was fed to the animals daily during a two month period starting 3 weeks after turnout. Groups A and B were given 106 and 2:5 105 chlamydospores per kg of live weight per day, respectively, while group C served as a non-dosed control group. Every two weeks the heifers were weighed and clinically inspected. On the same dates, faeces, blood and grass samples were collected. From mid-July onwards, the number of infective larvae in grass samples increased markedly P , 0:05 on paddock c, whereas low numbers of infective larvae were observed on paddocks a and b grazed by the fungus treated groups. However, the results indicate that administering fungal spores at a dose of 2:5 105 chlamydospores per kg live weight per day did not significantly prevent parasitism in calves, presumably due to insufficient suppression of developing infective larvae in the faeces. In contrast, a dose of 106 chlamydospores per kg lowered the parasite larval population on the pasture, reduced pepsinogen levels P , 0:05 ; and prevented calves from developing parasitosis.