Assessment of parasitic load in goat through the examination of faecal matter

Rajesh Kumar 1 , B.P. Singh 2 , S.S. Patil 3

1   Department of Veterinary Extension, Veterinary College, JAU, Junagadh-362001 (Gujarat), INDIA
2   Division of Extension Education, ICAR- IVRI, Izatnagar-243122, Bareilly (Uttar Pradesh), INDIA
3   Department of Animal Nutrition, Veterinary College, JAU, Junagadh-362001 (Gujarat), INDIA

✉ Coressponding author: See PDF.

doi https://doi.org/10.26832/24566632.2017.020412

doi

Abstract

Parasitic infection do not show heavy rate of mortality, however there occurrence being chronic, most of the time leads to serious production losses, this led to study about severity of parasitic load and type of parasitic infection in goats. Parasitic infection most of the time leads to serious production losses. Gastrointestinal nematodes are ubiquitous parasites of grazing ruminants and cause decreases in survival, live weight gain, wool and milk production and reproduction performance. Parasitic problems are a serious problem in goat. Total 60 goat faecal samples were analyzed. These results would serve as a baseline for future studies. The majority of the faecal samples (70%) of both zone I and zone II had heavy parasitic load (>3000 epg) followed by 60 per cent samples of zone III. This indicates that majority of the goats of the study area had severe parasitic infection. Chi-square analysis revealed non-significant relation between parasitic load and categories of zones. Majority of samples (48.33%) were infected with the combination of Strongyles, Strongyloides and Coccidiosis. It can be concluded that faecal egg count level was severe in majority of the samples examined.

Keywords:

Faecal matter, Gastrointestinal nematodes, Grazing ruminants, Goat, McMaster technique, Parasitic load

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Published

2017-12-01

How to Cite

Kumar, R., Singh, B., & Patil, S. (2017). Assessment of parasitic load in goat through the examination of faecal matter. Archives of Agriculture and Environmental Science, 2(4), 315-317. https://doi.org/10.26832/24566632.2017.020412

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Research Articles