Risk for endoparasites among production stages of female goats with notes on sustainable parasite control for smallholder flocks

Paul, Bura Thlama and Faez Firdaus Abdullah Jesse, and Juriah Kamaludeen, and Yonis Ahmed Jimale, and Ali Saidu, and Jajere, Saleh Mohammed and Mohd Azmi Mohd-Lila, (2024) Risk for endoparasites among production stages of female goats with notes on sustainable parasite control for smallholder flocks. Malaysian Applied Biology, 53 (2). pp. 145-153. ISSN 0126-8643

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Abstract

The risk of parasitism in different groups of small ruminants depends on intrinsic, environmental, and management factors. Although there are different views regarding the sex-related risk of endoparasites in small ruminants, females are undoubtedly the most affected group in the flock. Moreover, whether the greater sex-specific risk of parasitic infection observed in female goats in field situations is associated with their production or other intrinsic factors is still under scrutiny. In this paper, cross-sectional epidemiological data collected from selected small ruminant flocks were analysed to determine the distribution, risk, and burden of endoparasites in young, nonpregnant, pregnant, and lactating female goats. There was a higher incidence of gastrointestinal parasites (88.4%, 95%CI= 83.01- 92.19) than blood protozoa (54.0%, 95%CI= 46.85-60.92), with a significant difference among the groups. A higher risk of gastrointestinal parasites was observed in lactating (OR = 46.667, P = 0.001) and pregnant (OR = 9.167, P = 0.003) groups. A greater risk of blood protozoan infection was also observed in the pregnant (OR = 5.971, P = 0.0104) and lactating (OR = 3.600, P = 0.0528) groups. A significant increase in the mean faecal egg count of the lactating (2.72 ± 0.76) and pregnant (2.34 ± 0.97) groups (P < 0.05) was accompanied by a significantly lower mean PCV in the lactating group (23.48 ± 4.838) than the kids (29.44 ± 6.13), or nonpregnant (27.80 ± 5.525) groups (P < 0.05). Thus, the pregnant and lactating female goats may experience a greater exposure risk and burden of endoparasites. Therefore, female goats may be selectively targeted for implementing nutritional management, controlled grazing, and selective anthelmintic treatment during pregnancy and lactation to save cost and minimise excessive use of anthelmintic.

Item Type:Article
Keywords:Blood protozoa; Gastrointestinal parasites; Goats; Sex-specific risk; Sustainable control
Journal:Malaysian Applied Biology Journal
ID Code:24000
Deposited By: Siti Zarenah Jasin
Deposited On:09 Aug 2024 08:10
Last Modified:09 Aug 2024 08:10

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