Country-Wide Sheep 2021

Page 117

ANIMAL HEALTH Resistance

Breeder

Reversing triple drench resistance

Study farm with triple drench resistance Refugia group 5-25% lambs undrenched Quarantine group all lambs drenched

BY: SANDRA TAYLOR

E

arly results from a study looking at ways of managing triple drench resistance in an intensive lamb finishing system reinforces the importance of regular FECRT for both breeders and finishers. The study, initiated by the Wairarapa Producer Group, included breeders and finishers working together in a lamb trading arrangement. It was led by Renee Hogg from Inside New Zealand with technical expertise from PGG Wrightson vet Andrew Dowling, AgResearch’s Dr Dave Leathwick and Aiden Smith from South Wairarapa Vets. Information generated from the FECRT test informs the breeder about which drenches are working on their farm and is valuable information to a finisher, Dowling says. “Ineffective drenching costs money in lost production and time.” Recognising the value of working together to address the issue of drench resistance, the group found there was little practical advice on introducing refugia into a lamb finishing system and the impact this would have on drench efficacy. They also wanted to understand any negative outcomes from introducing refugia. Before the study started, and before the lambs left the breeders, a FECRT was carried out on all breeder farms and the finishing farm (study farm) to know the drench resistance status. Two areas of the study farm, diagnosed with triple drench resistance, were used to try different parasite management practices so lamb finishing would still be a feasible option. On one area of the study farm, a percentage of lambs (ranging from 5 to 25%) sourced from a farm with drenchsusceptible parasites (source of refugia) were left undrenched for a full grazing rotation while the remainder received their quarantine drench. On another area, all lambs were quarantine-drenched with a novel active drench as has been farm practice for many

Country-Wide

October 2021

Finisher

Breeders and finishers communicate drench resistance status with each other

10 days later, a drench check was carried out. Following that, every 28 days the number of parasites were checked

Quarantine

10 DAYS

Refugia

28 DAYS

All lambs drenched depending on results of the drench check

The drench status of the study farm will be tested for improvements over three years

3

YEARS

years. Subsequent drenching was with a triple combination or a novel active depending on the results of the drench check (a faecal egg count (FEC) was carried out 10 days after drenching to confirm drench and drench protocol is working). Faecal egg counts and larval identification were also carried out on the lambs that were the source of refugia to reduce the risk of introducing more-harmful parasite species and then every 28 days to monitor parasite burden. Results to date show an improvement of the drench status with both approaches, as well as a reduction in overall drench use, Dowling says. “However, as it takes time to improve the drench status on farms, the study is being carried out for three years to ensure these results are reliable.” The next FECRT to assess the drench status of the study farm will be carried out in Autumn 2022. Based on these early results, Dowling recommends finishers know the drench efficacy status (FECRT) of the worms on their farm and the worm challenge (FEC). Using highly effective drenches, maintaining refugia and reducing the number of drenches each lamb receives will slow the development of drench resistance. “You can only identify drench-susceptible

‘Ineffective drenching costs money in lost production and time.’ parasites from a recent FECRT on the farm supplying the lambs. “Know the parasites you are purchasing and if you’re selling animals, having drench-susceptible parasites could be valuable.” Effective quarantine drenching is also an important part of drench resistance management to prevent any new parasites or resistance arriving on farm via new stock. Maintaining a population of drenchsusceptible parasites is vital to the continued preservation of drench efficacy in any farm system. “Drench-resistant parasites cost you money in lower growth rates and wasted investment on ineffective drench,” Dowling says. “Build good relationships with people you trade livestock with and keep up the dialogue on your resistance status. “If you have a good FECRT then your parasites could be a valuable source of new refugia for a finisher.” Drench resistance on finishing farms is a serious risk to those selling store lambs, however, even farms with a good FECRT result can make improvements in their drench resistance management practices. • This study was funded by Beef + Lamb New Zealand and Silver Fern Farms.

117


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Articles inside

Calculator works out the numbers

2min
pages 172-173

And now, Freshwater Farm Plans

3min
page 171

Fewer but better sheep needed

8min
pages 166-170

Capturing the swing to natural fibres

3min
page 157

Profile: Wool’s colour and future is bright

5min
pages 152-156

Finding the winners

6min
pages 148-151

Obituary: Holmes Warren

5min
pages 146-147

Ram selection: Value in taking your time

2min
page 141

Breeding low-methane sheep

8min
pages 138-140

Condition major profit driver

11min
pages 129-133

What is wool’s future in NZ?

9min
pages 134-137

Reversing triple drench resistance

3min
pages 117-118

Plus equals assurance

2min
page 119

Shedding sheep: Reducing the workload

3min
page 116

Drenching: Achieving balance

2min
page 115

Pre-weaning treatments can be crucial

6min
pages 111-114

Mixing it with sheep and cattle

6min
pages 108-110

Resistant, resilient lambs make similar gains

6min
pages 90-91

What will the sheep of tomorrow be?

5min
pages 96-97

Post mortems: Get your knives out

8min
pages 102-104

Progeny testing: Resistant rams top performers

3min
page 63

Focus on timeless principles

6min
pages 42-45

To B12 or not B12 at tailing

4min
pages 105-107

Strong demand from China

2min
page 41

Succession: Clear vision, robust plan needed

6min
pages 26-27

High hopes for UK Christmas lamb

7min
pages 38-40

Testing time for new wool particle products

3min
pages 28-30

Super star status beckons for strong wool

4min
page 31

Sheep dairy full on

3min
page 25

Inverary Station scrutinises its business

9min
pages 18-21

India and Middle East: Good things take time

6min
pages 36-37

A niche sheep of the future

5min
pages 22-24
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