Abstract

Lambs weaned at eight weeks old were compared with control lambs which remained with their dams; both groups grazed the same pasture. Weaning significantly reduced the growth rate, control lambs being, on average, 6 kg heavier than weaned lambs at 15 weeks old. When contamination of pasture with larval parasites was light, both groups of lambs suffered only modest parasitic infections. When lambs were experimentally infected with 5000 Haemonchus contortus and 10,000 Trichostrongylus colubriformis larvae at eight weeks old, the mean faecal egg count for weaned lambs was twice that for controls at 12 weeks old (P<0·001) and weaned lambs suffered a significantly greater decline in packed cell volume than controls over the next four weeks. Antibody responses following immunisation with either ovalbumin or Brucella abortus at four and at eight weeks old, did not differ significantly between control and weaned lambs. In contrast serum antibody responses to H contortus and T colubriformis differed significantly between the two groups, with controls responding earlier and more strongly than weaned lambs. The practical significance of these findings is that up to three months old, suckled lambs, when faced with a substantial parasite challenge, have much better prospects than weaned lambs.

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