Author:
STEAR M. J.,BAIRDEN K.,BISHOP S. C.,GETTINBY G.,McKELLAR Q. A.,PARK M.,STRAIN S.,WALLACE D. S.
Abstract
The impact of mixed, nematode infection upon a group of animals
will depend upon the number of nematodes present,
how they are distributed among hosts and whether individuals that
are heavily parasitized with one species are more likely
to be heavily parasitized with other species. A survey of over 500
six-month-old, Scottish Blackface lambs from a single
farm in Southwest Strathclyde identified 7 different categories of
nematodes in the abomasum and small intestine. There
were considerable differences among years and among nematodes in
the prevalence and mean intensity of infection. Ostertagia circumcincta was present in nearly all lambs and judged
by prevalence and intensity is one of the most successful
of all parasitic nematodes. Each category of nematodes had a
skewed distribution; most animals had relatively few worms
but a small proportion had many worms. The variances of the number
of nematodes in each category were approximately
equal to the square of the mean. The counts of adult O. circumcincta
followed a negative binomial distribution, but the
negative binomial distribution did not provide a good description of
the observed values for the other species. These other
species had a lower prevalence and possibly some sheep were not exposed
to infection. There was no significant genetic
variation among lambs in the number of nematodes present and therefore
the differences among these lambs were unlikely
to be a consequence of genetic differences in host susceptibility.
Lambs with increased numbers of one species were more
likely to have increased numbers of the other species, but the
correlations were weak and may reflect covariation in
exposure to different parasites.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
68 articles.
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