Abstract

Helminth infections are ubiquitous in grazing ruminant production systems, and are responsible for significant costs and production losses. Anthelmintic Resistance (AR) in parasites is now widespread throughout Europe, although there are still gaps in our knowledge in some regions and countries. AR is a major threat to the sustainability of modern ruminant livestock production, resulting in reduced productivity, compromised animal health and welfare, and increased greenhouse gas emissions through increased parasitism and farm inputs. A better understanding of the extent of AR in Europe is needed to develop and advocate more sustainable parasite control approaches. A database of European published and unpublished AR research on gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) and liver fluke (Fasciola hepatica) was collated by members of the European COST Action “COMBAR” (Combatting Anthelmintic Resistance in Ruminants), and combined with data from a previous systematic review of AR in GIN. A total of 197 publications on AR in GIN were available for analysis, representing 535 studies in 22 countries and spanning the period 1980–2020. Reports of AR were present throughout the European continent and some reports indicated high within-country prevalence. Heuristic sample size-weighted estimates of European AR prevalence over the whole study period, stratified by anthelmintic class, varied between 0 and 48%. Estimated regional (country) prevalence was highly heterogeneous, ranging between 0% and 100% depending on livestock sector and anthelmintic class, and generally increased with increasing research effort in a country. In the few countries with adequate longitudinal data, there was a tendency towards increasing AR over time for all anthelmintic classes in GIN: aggregated results in sheep and goats since 2010 reveal an average prevalence of resistance to benzimidazoles (BZ) of 86%, macrocyclic lactones except moxidectin (ML) 52%, levamisole (LEV) 48%, and moxidectin (MOX) 21%. All major GIN genera survived treatment in various studies. In cattle, prevalence of AR varied between anthelmintic classes from 0–100% (BZ and ML), 0–17% (LEV) and 0–73% (MOX), and both Cooperia and Ostertagia survived treatment. Suspected AR in F. hepatica was reported in 21 studies spanning 6 countries. For GIN and particularly F. hepatica, there was a bias towards preferential sampling of individual farms with suspected AR, and research effort was biased towards Western Europe and particularly the United Kingdom. Ongoing capture of future results in the live database, efforts to avoid bias in farm recruitment, more accurate tests for AR, and stronger appreciation of the importance of AR among the agricultural industry and policy makers, will support more sophisticated analyses of factors contributing to AR and effective strategies to slow its spread.

Highlights

  • Livestock production is estimated to contribute on average 40% of agricultural production value worldwide (~60% in high income countries, ~30% in low- and middle-income countries) [45]

  • Prevalence was transformed to arcsine of the square root of prevalence in order to stabilise the variance around values close to 0 or 1

  • A live version of the database is freely available on the Open Science Framework [43] and submissions to update this website are invited via the COMBAR website [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Livestock production is estimated to contribute on average 40% of agricultural production value worldwide (~60% in high income countries, ~30% in low- and middle-income countries) [45]. The infection of ruminant livestock with helminth parasites, such as gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN, primarily trichostrongylids) and liver fluke (primarily Fasciola hepatica) threatens the profitability and sustainability of livestock production. Helminth infections may increase greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with ruminant livestock production; in Scotland, liver fluke infection is predicted to increase emissions from milk production by ~10% [1] and GIN infection is predicted to increase GHG emissions intensity in sheep systems by up to 30% [16, 23, 29, 47]. Effective and sustainable helminth control is essential in order to maintain high levels of productivity and welfare, and limit the contribution of the livestock sector to agricultural GHG emissions

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