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Canadian Journal of Comparative Medicine logoLink to Canadian Journal of Comparative Medicine
. 1974 Oct;38(4):448–456.

Seasonal Fluctuation an Inhited Development of Populations of Dictyocaulus filaria in Ewes and Lambs

L Ayalew 1,2,3, J L Fréchette 1,2,3, R Malo 1,2,3, C Beauregard 1,2,3
PMCID: PMC1319850  PMID: 4279764

Abstract

The fluctuation of populations of Dictyocaulus filaria in sheep was studied under field conditions in which animals are housed during the winter and grazed from late spring to autumn. A comparison was made between residual pasture contamination with overwintered larvae, the fecal larval deposition by ewes from June and both of these factors combined as sources of infection for spring born lambs. Ewes and lambs were killed serially over a year and worms were recovered from the lungs and counted. It was found that during the stabling period most of the ewes were carrying moderate numbers of D. filaria. However, while the vast majority of lungworm populations in the winter was inhibited in development at the early fifth larval stage, virtually all worms in the spring were adults. Any one source of infection studied contributed to the acquisition of important burdens of D. filaria by lambs as well as ewes. Worm counts reached peak in all lambs by November and this pointed to only one important Dictyocaulus generation per grazing season. It would also appear that larvae picked up by ewes and lambs as the grazing season advanced had become inhibited in development with the inhibition rate being most marked in autumn.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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