Abstract

Liver fluke infection (fascioliasis) is a parasitic disease which affects the health and welfare of ruminants. It is a concern for the livestock industry and is considered as a growing threat to the industry because changing climatic conditions are projected to be more favorable to increased frequency and intensity of liver fluke outbreaks. Recent reports highlighted that the incidence and geographic range of liver fluke has increased in the UK over the last decade and estimated to increase the average risk of liver fluke in the UK due to increasing temperature and rainfall. This paper explores financial impacts of the disease with and without climate change effects on Scottish livestock farms using a farm-level economic model. The model is based on farming system analysis and uses linear programming technique to maximize farm net profit within farm resources. Farm level data from a sample of 160 Scottish livestock farms is used under a no disease baseline scenario and two disease scenarios (with and without climate change). These two disease scenarios are compared with the baseline scenario to estimate the financial impact of the disease at farm levels. The results suggest a 12% reduction in net profit on an average dairy farm compared to 6% reduction on an average beef farm under standard disease conditions. The losses increase by 2-fold on a dairy farm and 6-fold on a beef farm when climate change effects are included with disease conditions on farms. There is a large variability within farm groups with profitable farms incurring relatively lesser economic losses than non-profitable farms. There is a substantial increase in number of vulnerable farms both in dairy (+20%) and beef farms (+27%) under the disease alongside climate change conditions.

Highlights

  • Liver fluke is a parasitic disease caused by Fasciola hepatica and is distributed globally [1]

  • There was a small difference in the impact of disease on dairy and beef production systems with beef farms projected to have a smaller loss with an average reduction of 6% in farm net profit compared to dairy farms which were projected to lose on average 12%

  • Liver fluke infection has economic consequences on a livestock production system and due to unequivocal assumptions of future climatic conditions to be more favorable for the disease to flourish, we included climate change effects to examine the economic impact of the disease at a farm level production system

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Summary

Introduction

Liver fluke (fascioliasis) is a parasitic disease caused by Fasciola hepatica and is distributed globally [1]. The disease is a concern for livestock industry both from an animal health perspective and due to the economic consequences on production systems. The economic impact is caused by lower production due to reduced body weight, milk yield and fertility as well as health conditions such as diarrhea and mortality in cattle [2]. It is estimated to cost the livestock sector around £2 billion per year globally [3, 4]. Liver fluke is endemic in the United Kingdom costing the cattle industry between £13 and £40 million annually [5] and more recent estimate is £31 million per year.

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