Author:
CHRISTENSEN C. M.,BARNES E. H.,NANSEN P.
Abstract
A trickle infection experiment was undertaken to study in detail
the
population dynamics of Oesophagostomum dentatum
in pigs. Three groups of 32 pigs were inoculated via the feed twice weekly
with 100 (Group A), 1000 (Group B) or 10000
(Group C) O. dentatum infective larvae (L3). Five
pigs from each group were killed 2, 4, 8, 12, 16, and 20 weeks after the
first inoculation (p.i.) to determine their worm burdens. Weekly faecal
egg
counts were determined. At slaughter, worms
were counted, differentiated according to sex and developmental stage,
and their
length measured. Faecal egg counts
ranked with dose rate until week 15, but later were more variable. The
proportion
of the total number of L3 administered
which were recovered at slaughter inversely ranked with dose rate. In group
C
it decreased over time, whereas in groups
A and B there was no consistent pattern. Worm fecundities (epg/female)
in groups A and B were higher than in group
C. The lengths of the female worms increased over time, whereas the lengths
of
the male worms remained approximately
constant from week 8. The study suggests reduced establishment of incoming
larvae and
lower fecundity of the female worms at high dose levels.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
12 articles.
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