Abstract

The presence of Toxoplasma gondii in the diaphragm was correlated with the dye test titres in 174 sheep. In 94 of these the presence of the parasite was also correlated with the haemoglobin (Hb) type. T. gondii was recovered from 3 % of the sheep with titres < 1/16, compared with 30 % of those with titres 1/16 and 70 % of those with titres ≥ 1/32. The results indicate that the distinction between serologically positive and negative individuals at a final serum dilution of 1/16 is justified. Some evidence was found that the parasite is easier to recover from dye test positive mature sheep than from dye test positive lambs. Of the 174 sheep, 143 were examined at random among 186 sheep culled or cast for age during a 4-year period from 1 flock in which the prevalence of Toxoplasma antibodies was representative for flocks in the southern Norway, and T. gondii was recovered from 53 (37 %) of these. It was concluded that 10—15 % of the lamb carcases and 25—37 % of the carcases from mature sheep in this country have T. gondii in their muscles detectable by the peptic digestion technique. A possible genetical influence on the infection was indicated by the higher frequency of recoveries of T. gondii from sheep with Hb type B than from sheep with the Hb types A or AB, but the number of individuals with Hb type B was too small to demonstrate statistically significant differences. The epidemiological importance of infected sheep carcases is discussed.

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