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The Goat as a Risk Factor for Parasitic Infections in Ovine Flocks.

David García-DiosRosario PanaderoPablo DíazMiguel ViñaSusana RemesarAlberto PrietoGonzalo López-LorenzoNéstor Martínez-CalabuigPablo Díez-BañosPatrocinio MorrondoCeferino Manuel López
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2021)
Small ruminants in northwestern Spain are frequently managed in mixed flocks. Sheep-goat joint management has not been considered a risk factor for parasite infection, so the main objective of this study was to establish if mixed management with goats supposes a risk factor for parasitic infections in ovine flocks. Two thousand and ninety-three sheep were sampled from 74 commercial meat ovine flocks for diagnostic of the main parasites. Goat contact was a risk factor for sheep to be infected by protostrongylids, Dictyocaulus filaria, gastrointestinal nematodes and Eimeria spp. In contrast, Moniezia, Fasciola hepatica, Dicrocoelium dendriticum and Paramphistomidae prevalences were not influenced. Sheep-goat mixed management can be considered as a risk factor, since goats would act as a source of pasture contamination for interspecific parasites (protostrongylids, Dictyocaulus filaria and gastrointestinal nematodes). In relation to host-specific parasites, such as Eimeria spp., goats cannot be considered as a source for sheep, but competition for food and spaces between both small ungulates can suppose a reduced grazing area to sheep, provoking high environmental contamination and stress that facilitate their infection. Future epidemiological studies for parasitic infections in small ruminants should consider sheep-goat mixed management as a possible risk factor to be included in multivariate analyses.
Keyphrases
  • risk factors
  • plasmodium falciparum
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • computed tomography
  • climate change
  • heat stress
  • life cycle