| Res Vet Sci 1990 Sep;49(2):132-7
Effect of copper oxide wire particle treatment on establishment of major gastrointestinal nematodes in lambs. Bang KS, Familton AS, Sykes AR - Department of Animal Science, Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand. Eighty-four 10-week-old lambs were used to investigate the effect of
copper oxide wire particle treatment on the establishment of major gastrointestinal
nematodes. They were maintained on pasture previously treated to minimise
larval contamination. Five grams of uniform sized copper oxide wire particles
were given orally five days before infection with either 20,000 Trichostrongylus
colubriformis larvae, 20,000 Ostertagia circumcincta larvae or 3000 Haemonchus
contortus larvae given as three doses at three-day intervals. The animals
were slaughtered 21 or 22 days after the last infective dose. Parasite
burdens in the lambs treated with copper oxide wire particles were reduced
by 96 per cent in the case of H contortus and by 56 per cent in the case
of O circumcincta compared to burdens in controls. There was no significant
effect of copper particles on the establishment of T colubriformis.
PMID: 2236907, UI: 91047249 |