Autor: |
Sangster, N.C., Kelly, J.D., Whitlock, H.V., Gunawanf, M., Porter, C.J. |
Zdroj: |
Research in Veterinary Science; July 1980, Vol. 29 Issue: 1 p26-30, 5p |
Abstrakt: |
Merino and Border Leicester cross Merino sheep, nine months old, were infected with 10,000 third stage larvae of both Trichostrongylus colubriformis(PF4) and Ostertagia circumcincta/O trifurcata(PF5), known to have varying degrees of resistance to levamisole, morantel tartrate and thiabendazole. Crossbred sheep carried heavier Ostertagiasp worm burdens but there was no difference in susceptibility between the two breeds of sheep to infection with T colubriformis.The anthelmintic eflicacy of thiabendazole, at 50 mg/kg, against T colubriformiswas 81·8 per cent and 92·4 per cent for Merinos and crossbreds respectively while levamisole, at 6·75 mg/kg, was 12·3 per cent and 18 per cent effective. Thiabendazole removed 92·3 per cent and 83·8 per cent of Ostertagiasp in Merinos and crossbreds respectively. However, worm burdens in levamisole treated sheep were not significantly different from controls. No significant breed diferences were found in 24 h faecal egg outputs. It is suggested that breed differences previously described in four-month-old sheep may have been due to differences in the rate of development of immune responsiveness. This disparity was no longer detectable in the immunologically mature sheep used in this study. |
Databáze: |
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