Effect of weaning age on growth rates of lambs infected by gastrointestinal parasites
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Date
2006
Type
Conference Contribution - published
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Abstract
Gastrointestinal parasitism is one of the most important
challenges facing low chemical or organic livestock
production systems but also conventional farmers as
resistance to anthelmintics becomes more widespread.
Young twin-born and reared lambs were challenged for
5 days (Experiment 1) or trickle infected with parasites
(Experiment 2) and not weaned (Expt. 1. only) or early
(8 and 7 weeks) or late weaned (16 and 14 weeks; Expt.
1 & 2 respectively). Liveweight gain was measured until
lambs were 19 weeks of age (Expt. 1) or 25 weeks of
age (Expt. 2). Early weaning (7-8 weeks) reduced
liveweight gain by at least 25% in both years and lambs
remained 5 kg lighter at the completion of the experiments.
Parasite infection had modest effects on lamb performance
and there was no interaction between weaning age and
parasite infection in either year. Infected lambs generally
grew well, gaining at least 90 g/d possibly due to the
relatively young age of the lambs limiting their ability to
mount an immune response.
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