Abstract
Targeted selective treatment (TST) strategies, in which a proportion of the flock or herd is
left untreated so that anthelmintic-susceptible genotypes are preserved, are increasingly
advocated as a means of prolonging the effective life of current anthelmintic drugs. The
major limitation to this approach is a lack of efficient indicators for selection, which can be
applied effectively on commercial farms to identify individuals that can be left untreated
without fear of disease or production loss. With the advent of electronic identification and
automated weighing technology, monitoring of short-term changes in weight gain shows
promise as such an indicator, but its operation in the field as part of TST has yet to be
evaluated. Widespread deployment of weight-based TST will be highly dependent on the
likely production penalty from leaving the fastest growing animals untreated. On a
commercial flock in south-west UK, the weight gain of 508 lambs of various breeds was
tracked using an automated identification and weighing system, every one to ten weeks
from June to December (one to four weeks in summer), and a variable proportion of the
fastest growing individuals that also appeared to be in good condition with little breech
soiling was left untreated during whole-flock dosing in June, July and August. In total, 51
lambs were selected for non-treatment on at least one occasion, while the other lambs
were treated two or three times during the summer. Subsequent weight gain of untreated
animals was not reduced relative to their peers in either the short-term or over the whole
grazing season. Faecal egg counts from untreated individuals did not differ significantly
from those of the rest of the flock, suggesting that animals left untreated on the basis of
weight gain can contribute effectively to refugia. The application of TST in this case is
cautious in its extent, but this is appropriate on a commercial farm with associated
aversion to production loss. Results suggest that such losses can be avoided while leaving
part of the flock untreated, and should encourage wider application of this approach to
slow the development of anthelmintic resistance. Since the cost of investment in weighing
and recording systems is likely to prove prohibitive to many farmers, other selective
indicators should also be investigated. The co-ordination of TST with pasture use to
maximise the benefit in terms of environmental refugia, and its integration with other
control strategies, also requires further attention.
| Translated title of the contribution | Weight-based targeted selective treatment of gastrointestinal nematodes in a commercial sheep flock |
|---|---|
| Original language | English |
| Pages (from-to) | 59 - 65 |
| Journal | Veterinary Parasitology |
| Volume | 164 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2009 |
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