New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research abstracts
Effect of herbage species and feeding level on internal parasites and
production performance of grazing lambs
G. H. SCALES
T. L. KNIGHT
D. J. SAVILLE
AgResearch
Canterbury Agriculture and Science Centre
P.O. Box 60, Lincoln
Canterbury, New Zealand
Abstract The effect of internal parasites on the performance
of lambs grazing different forage species was examined in two experiments. In
Experiment 1, 300 Coopworth lambs grazed stands of Nui ryegrass, Wana
cocksfoot, Au Triumph tall fescue, Puna chicory, or Otaio lucerne for 64 days
between February and April 1992. Lambs were either infected with 10000 mixed
species L3 larvae at the start of the grazing or maintained free of parasites
by fortnightly drenching with ivermectin. Herbage was offered at either 2 or 4
kg DM/head per day (green). In Experiment 2, Nui ryegrass was replaced with
low-endophyte Ruanui ryegrass and lambs were infected with 19500 L3 larvae 21
days before grazing which commenced on 2 February 1993 and continued for 100
days. In Experiment 1, few herbage larvae were recovered during grazing and
differences among forage species were not significant. In Experiment 2, more
larvae per kg DM were recovered from the grass swards than from either chicory
or lucerne (
P < 0.05), differences among the grasses being small.
Faecal egg counts averaged 1030 epg in Experiment 1, counts tending to be lower
in lambs grazing ryegrass and chicory (
P < 0.05). In Experiment 2,
FEC averaged 730 epg, lambs grazing chicory or lucerne having significantly
(
P < 0.05) lower counts (c. 320 epg) than lambs grazing grasses
(c. 1100 epg). Numbers of adult nematodes in lambs at the end of the grazing
period followed similar trends to FEC counts,
Trichostrongylus sp. being
the most common nematode present (67%) in both experiments. Parasitised lambs
had higher dag scores than control lambs (
P < 0.01) but, with the
exception of endophytic Nui ryegrass, there was little difference among the
forages when lambs were maintained free of parasites. There was no consistent
relationship between dag score and faecal DM%, FEC, adult nematodes, or carcass
weight gain (
r2 < 0.36). In Experiment 1, control lambs
offered a high allowance of chicory grew at 311 g/day, significantly (
P
< 0.01) faster than their counterparts on lucerne (222 g/day) or grasses
(169-195 g/day). In Experiment 2, growth rates of control lambs grazing chicory
and lucerne were similar at c. 250 g/day and faster (
P < 0.01) than
those on grasses (120-148 g/day). Parasites significantly depressed estimated
carcass weight gains in both years (
P < 0.01), the effect being
greater in Experiment 2 (2.7 kg) than Experiment 1 (0.4 kg). In Experiment 1,
the impact of parasites was confined mainly to lambs grazing grasses at low
herbage allowances, particularly ryegrass (
P < 0.05). In Experiment
2, where the larval challenge was higher, lambs grazing all species other than
chicory were affected. It was concluded that the use of chicory can reduce the
effects of parasitism on the growth of grazing lambs relative to either
ryegrass, cocksfoot, or tall fescue, but responses to lucerne are more
variable.
Keywords herbage species; ryegrass; cocksfoot; tall fescue;
chicory; lucerne; nutrition; herbage allowance; lambs; nematodes;
Trichostrongylus; Ostertagia
New Zealand Journal of Agricultural Research, 1995, Vol. 38: 237-247
0028-8233/95/3802-0237 $2.50/0 (c) The Royal Society of New Zealand
1995
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