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Gastrointestinal nematode infections in adult dairy cattle

Johannes Charlier (UGent) , Edwin Claerebout (UGent) and Jozef Vercruysse (UGent)
Author
Organization
Abstract
Gastrointestinal (GI) nematode infections are present on all pasture-based cattle farms. The most important species in temperate climate areas are Ostertagia ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora. Infections with these species are an important cause of economic loss on farms throughout the world. The losses are mainly caused by clinical disease or reduced growth rates in young animals and milk yield losses in adult cows. Milk yield responses to anthelmintic treatment in recent studies in pastured dairy herds were observed to be around 1 kg/cow per day. The negative effect of GI nematodes on production are ascribed to a reduction in voluntary feed intake and the energy requirements of the immune response raised against these infections. GI nematode infections can be monitored based on O. ostertagi-specific antibody measurement, which provides information on the level of larval exposure and an indication of the associated production losses. Other diagnostic parameters are considered of limited use in adult cattle. Control relies on anthelmintic treatment and grazing management, which can be used complementary to each other. The three critical factors that need to be considered when developing an anthelmintic control strategy in adult cows are the unpredictability of the treatment response, the timing of treatment and the risk for developing anthelmintic resistance.
Keywords
gastrointestinal nematodes, parasites, Dairy cattle, Ostertagia, Cooperia, control, anthelmintic, diagnosis, milk production

Citation

Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:

MLA
Charlier, Johannes, et al. “Gastrointestinal Nematode Infections in Adult Dairy Cattle.” Encyclopedia of Dairy Science, edited by H Roginski et al., Academic Press, 2009, pp. 2215–20.
APA
Charlier, J., Claerebout, E., & Vercruysse, J. (2009). Gastrointestinal nematode infections in adult dairy cattle. In H. Roginski, J. Fuquay, & P. Fox (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Dairy Science (pp. 2215–2220). London: Academic Press.
Chicago author-date
Charlier, Johannes, Edwin Claerebout, and Jozef Vercruysse. 2009. “Gastrointestinal Nematode Infections in Adult Dairy Cattle.” In Encyclopedia of Dairy Science, edited by H Roginski, JW Fuquay, and PF Fox, 2215–20. London: Academic Press.
Chicago author-date (all authors)
Charlier, Johannes, Edwin Claerebout, and Jozef Vercruysse. 2009. “Gastrointestinal Nematode Infections in Adult Dairy Cattle.” In Encyclopedia of Dairy Science, ed by. H Roginski, JW Fuquay, and PF Fox, 2215–2220. London: Academic Press.
Vancouver
1.
Charlier J, Claerebout E, Vercruysse J. Gastrointestinal nematode infections in adult dairy cattle. In: Roginski H, Fuquay J, Fox P, editors. Encyclopedia of Dairy Science. London: Academic Press; 2009. p. 2215–20.
IEEE
[1]
J. Charlier, E. Claerebout, and J. Vercruysse, “Gastrointestinal nematode infections in adult dairy cattle,” in Encyclopedia of Dairy Science, H. Roginski, J. Fuquay, and P. Fox, Eds. London: Academic Press, 2009, pp. 2215–2220.
@incollection{956396,
  abstract     = {{Gastrointestinal (GI) nematode infections are present on all pasture-based cattle farms. The most important species in temperate climate areas are Ostertagia ostertagi and Cooperia oncophora. Infections with these species are an important cause of economic loss on farms throughout the world. The losses are mainly caused by clinical disease or reduced growth rates in young animals and milk yield losses in adult cows. Milk yield responses to anthelmintic treatment in recent studies in pastured dairy herds were observed to be around 1 kg/cow per day. The negative effect of GI nematodes on production are ascribed to a reduction in voluntary feed intake and the energy requirements of the immune response raised against these infections. GI nematode infections can be monitored based on O. ostertagi-specific antibody measurement, which provides information on the level of larval exposure and an indication of the associated production losses. Other diagnostic parameters are considered of limited use in adult cattle. Control relies on anthelmintic treatment and grazing management, which can be used complementary to each other. The three critical factors that need to be considered when developing an anthelmintic control strategy in adult cows are the unpredictability of the treatment response, the timing of treatment and the risk for developing anthelmintic resistance.}},
  author       = {{Charlier, Johannes and Claerebout, Edwin and Vercruysse, Jozef}},
  booktitle    = {{Encyclopedia of Dairy Science}},
  editor       = {{Roginski, H and Fuquay, JW and Fox, PF}},
  isbn         = {{9780122272356}},
  keywords     = {{gastrointestinal nematodes,parasites,Dairy cattle,Ostertagia,Cooperia,control,anthelmintic,diagnosis,milk production}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{2215--2220}},
  publisher    = {{Academic Press}},
  title        = {{Gastrointestinal nematode infections in adult dairy cattle}},
  year         = {{2009}},
}