Prevalence and epidemiology of trichostrongylids in Wyoming cattle with consideration of the inhibited development of Ostertagia ostertagi
- PMID: 8893483
- DOI: 10.1016/0304-4017(95)00924-8
Prevalence and epidemiology of trichostrongylids in Wyoming cattle with consideration of the inhibited development of Ostertagia ostertagi
Abstract
During 1988, monthly collections of abomasa and the cranial portion of the small intestine of 208 native Wyoming cattle were examined for adult and larval helminth parasites. Egg counts were performed on colonic faecal specimens. The animals ranged from 7 months to 8 years of age and were sampled at slaughter houses or diagnostic laboratories from five different counties in the State. Most of the cattle had ranged for a long time on non-irrigated, high altitude grass plains from about 1250 to 2500 m above sea level. All animals examined were found infected. Nematode genera (and number of species) found included Ostertagia (4), Trichostrongylus (2), Haemonchus (1), Cooperia (4) and Nematodirus (2). One trematode, Fasciola hepatica, and a cestode, Moniezia benedeni, also were found. Trichostrongylus axei, Trichostrongylus longispicularis and Cooperia lyrata were found for the first time in Wyoming, Ostertagia circumcincta was found for the first time in cattle in Wyoming, and Haemonchus placei, tentatively identified in a previous survey, was definitively confirmed. Predominant species (and prevalence) were Ostertagia ostertagi (98%), Cooperia oncophora (60.6%), Ostertagia bisonis (41.8%), Cooperia bisonis (33.6%) and T. Axei (27.9%). One or more of the four species of Ostertagia were found in all animals. Inhibited O. ostertagi and O. bisonis larvae predominated from November to April and reached a peak in January to comprise 88% of the total nematode burden for that month. The adult population of abomasal nematodes peaked in April and predominated thereafter until October. Haemonchus placei also spent the autumn-winter period in an inhibited state of development. Faecal egg counts were lowest during winter months, when the highest number of worms were present as L4 larvae, as determined by luminal and mucosal counts. Nematode populations in the small intestine peaked in June and persisted until November. The results of this study showed the magnitude and species composition of nematode parasitism in cattle raised on high altitude grass plains, underscored the inaccuracy of faecal egg counts as an indicator of worm burden during fall and winter seasons, and provided information on which anthelmintic treatment timing would be most efficacious.
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