Abstract

Coyne M. J., Smith G. and Johnstone C. 1991. A study of the mortality and fecundity of Haemonchus contortus in sheep following experimental infections. International Journal for Parasitology 21: 847–853. The regulation of the fecundity and mortality of H. contortus in sheep was examined using a series of mathematical models. Six-month-old Dorset crossbred lambs were infected once only with various doses of infective H. contortus larvae (500–20,000 larvae). Parasite mortality was found to be an increasing linear function of the magnitude of the initial infection over the range of doses examined. Parasite fecundity was found to remain constant over the intensity and duration of the infection. The average fecundity for H. contortus at the time of slaughter was found to be 7037 eggs per female worm per day. There was no evidence of time-dependent changes in fecundity or density-dependent regulation of fecundity.

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