Using a forecasting system based on climate data, the Agri-Food and Biosciences Institute (AFBI) have predicted that the overall risk of liver fluke infection in cattle and sheep during this autumn and winter will be high across all areas of Northern Ireland.
The levels of rainfall during the months of June, July and September were considerably higher than the national average. In particular, eastern areas of the province, which would normally be considered dry, have seen significant levels of rainfall this summer. Although August was drier, the unusually high rainfall in June and July will have offset any drying effect, with ground conditions remaining damp, ideal for the survival of the intermediate host, the snail Galba truncatula.
What to look for? Liver fluke disease can occur in either acute or chronic forms. The acute form occurs in sheep and is caused by the migration of large numbers of immature flukes through the liver. Acute liver fluke is often fatal and has serious welfare implications. Signs of severe infection include distended painful abdomen, anaemia and sudden death. In less severe cases, poor production and growth, coupled with reduced appetite and abdominal pain, are apparent. Chronic liver fluke disease is more common than the acute form and occurs in both sheep and cattle, usually during the winter and spring, although infection can persist throughout the year. Affected animals may exhibit ‘bottle jaw’ (swelling under the jaw).
Fluke infection can cause a reduction of 5-15 per cent in the milk yield of dairy cows and loss of growth in fattening lambs and cattle. It is therefore a source of considerable financial loss to the local agricultural industry. Fluke infections in dairy cattle can also predispose to metabolic conditions such as ketosis and infectious diseases such as salmonellosis. The same is likely to be true for sheep. Migrating liver fluke can also predispose animals to the clostridial infection Black disease, and care should be taken to ensure that cattle and sheep in fluke affected areas are fully vaccinated against this.
All farmers should review their fluke control measures at this time of year. Access to snail habitats (wet and poorly drained areas) should be reduced or sheep taken off the land and housed or moved to new clean pasture.
However, in most cases, control will be based on the strategic use of anthelmintics, employing a product effective against the life cycle stages likely to be present in the flock or herd at the time of treatment. This is particularly important in autumn when acute fluke infection occurs in sheep and pick-up of infection by sheep and cattle is still taking place. At this time of year, a product effective against immature and mature forms is needed. Use of such a product on out-wintered sheep once or twice in autumn and maybe in January, coupled with a treatment effective against adult flukes in early spring, should significantly reduce the fluke burden on individual farms.
Treatment of chronic (adult) infections in cattle as well as sheep during the winter or early spring is important to help reduce pasture contamination with fluke eggs. Use of an anthelmintic with activity mainly against adult flukes may be sufficient in these circumstances. However the flukicide programme used has to be on a ‘know-your-farm’ basis and no one set of recommendations will cover all flocks or herds.
Farmers need to be aware that resistance to fluke treatments is an emerging problem and has been detected in Northern Ireland. Pproducts containing triclabendazole (the only flukicide currently licensed in UK and Ireland that is effective against the immature stages of liver fluke, causing acute fasciolosis in sheep) have been used almost exclusively for a number of years. On such farms it is possible that triclabendazole-containing products may now be less effective in controlling fluke infection, and for treating acutely-ill animals. The effectiveness of anthelmintic treatment on individual farms can be checked by taking dung samples 3-4 weeks after treatment and submitting them, through your veterinary surgeon, for laboratory examination.
In recent years, stomach (rumen) flukes have also become common in sheep and cattle in NI, and this is particularly the case in fluke-prone areas. It is believed that the snail Galba truncatula serves as intermediate host to both liver fluke and rumen fluke. Adult rumen flukes are less damaging to sheep and cattle than liver flukes, but heavy infections of immature worms may cause diarrhoea, ill-thrift and, exceptionally, death in young animals. Already this year, a number of deaths of sheep and cattle due to acute paramphistomosis have been recorded. The condition is caused by the immature worms migrating in the intestine, and it represents an emerging concern for both sheep and cattle farmers in years when the summer rainfall has been above average.
If you suspect that stomach fluke infection may be a problem on your farm, you should contact your veterinary surgeon to arrange for appropriate laboratory testing, and to discuss treatment options.
Advice on the most suitable anthelmintic and other control measures can be obtained from your veterinary surgeon. The AFBI veterinary laboratories at Stormont and Omagh can assist your veterinary surgeon by testing dung and blood samples from livestock for evidence of fluke infection and associated liver damage, and by examination of carcases for liver fluke or paramphistome infection. Further information on fluke disease in cattle and sheep may be found here
Notes to editors:
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