parasite control

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Parasite control

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Parasite control. Objectives. Describe the principles of control Describe types of anthelmintic usage Be aware of organised control schemes Understand the value of models in predicting the outcome of treatments. Parasite control. Flock nutrition Grazing management Stock management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Parasite control

Parasite control

Page 2: Parasite control

Objectives

• Describe the principles of control

• Describe types of anthelmintic usage

• Be aware of organised control schemes

• Understand the value of models in predicting the outcome of treatments

Page 3: Parasite control

Parasite control

• Flock nutrition• Grazing management• Stock management• Using anthelmintics

– Suppressive– Curative– Strategic– Quarantine drench

• Testing for resistance

Page 4: Parasite control

Nutrition

• Feed young stock and ewes well. Under-nourished stock have a reduced capacity to resist parasites

• Immunity to parasites is related closely to bodyweights. It is essential that target weights should be established and stock monitored & fed accordingly

• Supplementary feeding of weaner/hogget sheep with protein feeds will increase both bodyweight and parasite immunity

• Feeding in troughs preferable

Page 5: Parasite control

Grazing Management• Use of cattle to prepare weaner/hogget pastures

with a 6 month rotation• Match young stock DSE with cattle DSE• Use of dry sheep older than 3 years of age to aid

decontamination of weaner/hogget pastures• The 3 year + dry sheep have well developed

parasite resistance if maintained in good condition• Cell or strip grazing in some conditions

Page 6: Parasite control

Stock Management• Tops & tail strategy. Weaner supplementation targeted

at tail of mob. Monitor weights of young stock and feed accordingly

• Culling sheep that are “worm factories” where possible• Consideration given to leaving 5% mob [heaviest]

untreated, in mobs where natural immunity is established

• Consideration could also be given to destocking sheep from pasture for 15 months and running cattle on that portion of the property, to create a safe/clean paddock

Page 7: Parasite control

Some sheep have more worms than others.Which ones would you sell?

Page 8: Parasite control

Drench usage

• Know your drenches

• Some companies sell “solutions” for resistance

• Mixtures are useful

• Treating only heavily infected animals is being trialed

• There are Government sponsored schemes

• You can use drenches in different ways

Page 9: Parasite control

Using drenches –Quarantine Drenching

• Stock purchased onto a property should receive a quarantine drench and be isolated on a contaminated paddock before being run with the main flock

• The cleanout treatment should consist of ML [preferably moxidectin], BZ & LEV

• “Q drench” is marketed for this purpose

Page 10: Parasite control

Suppressive (Systematic) Treatments

• Regular treatments at intervals equal to the pre-patent period of the parasite, or the ppp plus persistence period.

• Advantages: Very effective, in the short, term in minimising parasite populations and production losses.

• Disadvantages: Rapidly selects for drug resistance.

• This strategy should not be promoted• Temporal refugia low

Page 11: Parasite control

Curative Treatments• Treatment based on clinical diagnosis.

Only animals perceived to need treatment are treated

• Trigger mechanisms include:– Signs of sub-clinical and clinical symptoms– Faecal egg count monitoring.– Using bio-assays (e.g. FAMACHA)– Weight loss

Benefits: it slows selection for resistance.But: production losses occurTemporal (& spatial) Refugia high

Page 12: Parasite control

FAMACHA

• Way to select anaemic sheep with haemonchosis for treatment and culling

• Curative treatment• Costly in Australia (developed in RSA)• Reduces treatment frequency so reduces R selection• Various references

Page 13: Parasite control

Strategic Drenching

• Aims to prevent contamination of pastures with eggs and larvae

• Requires knowledge of local conditions for egg development and larval survival

• Has a proven record in control

• May select strongly for resistance

• Treatment is applied when larval pasture levels are low (Spatial Refugia low)

Page 14: Parasite control

Summary - Control of resistance Be aware of refugia issues, do not treat all sheep onto a

“clean” pasture) (ie drench and move is not best) Administer drugs correctly, give full & effective doses,

starve sheep before a ML or BZ drench, yard 24h post treatment see http://www.csiro.au/WormTreatment

Use mixture of drugs with similar half lives, if this is not feasible rotate annually between drugs with a different mode of action

Where possible use non-persistent chemicals Provide a quarantine treatment/regimen for all imports Reduce drench frequency by using strategic control &

developing a flock structure with immune hosts Leave some sheep untreated.

Page 15: Parasite control
Page 16: Parasite control

Wormkill

• Integrated, strategic worm control originally based on closantel

• Northern Ranges of NSW in summer rainfall zones• Flock management plus monitoring• Highest compliance worm control approach in the

world• Closantel resistance emerged now rotations reduce

pressure on R• NSW Ag

Page 17: Parasite control

Drenchplan

• Integrated strategic control relying on 1-2 summer drenches (Nov/Dec & Feb) also drench weaners

• Drenches OK but pasture management is complex• Combinations to delay R• Treat in summer so low refugia and R selection.

Drench lambs at risk• NSW Ag

Page 18: Parasite control

+

-

This is a model

Page 19: Parasite control

What is a model? What is a good model

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Computer models

Host/parasite systems are complex especially when environmental and management aspects are superimposed.

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Examples of models for parasite control

• PARABAN (cattle)

• WORM WORLD (Sheep)

• TROPICAL WORM WORLD (sheep in tropical climates)

Page 22: Parasite control

WormWorld Simulation Model

WORMS IN

SHEEP

EGGS IN FAECES

LARVAE ON PASTURE

LARVAE EATEN

drenching

sheep immunity

sheep moves

weather

lambing, stress

Page 23: Parasite control

Negative Binomial Distribution Low k means more aggregation Typically k 0.3 - 2 As k distribution tends to Poisson.

0

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

0.40

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24

number of worms

pro

po

rtio

n o

f fl

ock

Poisson mean = 10

negative binomialk = 0.3 mean = 10

Models need to account for stochastic distributions

Page 24: Parasite control

Input parameters

• Flocks– Number of sheep– Age– Sex– Initial worm burden– Immunity– Lethal burden– Lambing dates and data

Page 25: Parasite control

Input parameters

• Pasture– Number and size of paddocks

– Initial contamination

• Management– Dates

– Paddock moves

– Treatments

• Genetics– Genes for R

– Gene frequency

– Efficacy against phenotypes (ie. dominant, recessive)

Page 26: Parasite control

Outputs

• Larvae on pasture

• Eggs in faeces

• Worms in sheep

• Deaths

• Drug resistance gene frequencies

Page 27: Parasite control

More about models

• Models must be validated

• They allow us to ‘test’ parasite control measures before we use them

• They can tell us what is important in using drugs sustainably

• They can tell us about the vulnerability of different parts of the life cycle

Page 28: Parasite control

Examples:

60 70 80 90 10060

80

100

0

10

20

30

40

50la

mb

de

ath

s p

er

20

00

% efficacy% responding

I s R e f u g ia a S t o c k M a n a g e m e n t i s s u e ?

05

1015202530

0 2 4 6 8 10Years

R fre

quen

cy (%

) drought

nodrought

Page 29: Parasite control

Now a demonstration of Tropical Worm World

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Rotate 22 days

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Rotate 4 days

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Rotate 22 plus a drench

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Challenge

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Sloths

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Bots

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Scapegoats

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Pumas

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Moose

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Brumbies

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Tigers

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PP