Abstract

A prospective cohort study on zero-grazed smallholder dairy farms was conducted to determine factors associated with onset and counts of gastrointestinal parasitism in heifer calves. The researchers recruited 187 newborn heifer calves from 150 farms in Kenya. Over 16 months, farm visits every two months were used to collect rectal fecal samples and animal- and farm-level measures. Fecal samples underwent centrifugal fecal flotation with Sheather’s sugar to determine counts of strongyle-type eggs and coccidia oocysts. Cox proportional hazard (Cox PH) analysis and mixed-effects negative binomial (MeNB) regression determined factors associated with time-to-onset and counts of strongyle-type eggs and coccidia oocysts, respectively (P < 0.05). The incidence rate of strongyles was 0.0011 cases/animal-day while coccidia was 0.0073 cases /animal-day. Incidence risks of strongyles and coccidia over the study period were 28.3 % (53/187) and 87.7 % (164/187), respectively. For infected calves, median time-to-onset for strongyles and coccidia was 78 (interquartile-range: IQR 38–117) and 43 (IQR 29–92) days, respectively. In the final Cox PH model for strongyles, breed (Ayrshires and Jerseys) and weaned calves had a greater hazard of infection than Friesians and preweaned calves, respectively. Calf tethering outside the pen was associated with a higher hazard of strongyle infection. In the final Cox PH model for coccidia, calves with watery and/or hemorrhagic diarrhea had a higher hazard compared with those with hard or soft feces. Weaning status and birth weight (kg) were time-varying covariates, leading to increased hazard over time. In the final MeNB model for strongyles, weaned animals had higher counts than those still on milk. In an interaction variable, the predicted strongyle-type egg counts increased with longer duration of farm operation when herd size was less than five cattle, but decreased when herd size was more than five. In the final MeNB model for coccidia, calves sometimes tethered outside their pens had higher counts than those continuously enclosed in the pen. Calf pen floors with either scant manure or moderate slurry had higher predicted counts than those on a clean pen floor. Calves with watery or hemorrhagic diarrhea and fed fresh Napier grass (Pennisetum purpureum) had higher counts compared with soft or hard feces and those not given fresh Napier, respectively. In an interaction variable, calves experiencing diarrhea and raised on elevated slatted floors had lower oocyst counts compared with those having diarrhea but not on elevated floors. The identified management practices associated with onset and counts of gastrointestinal parasitism should be considered in control efforts.

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