EQUUS

A WAY TO BOOST DEWORMING TREATMENTS

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A study from Spain suggests that parasite-eating fungi may be used to prolong the efficacy of deworming treatments for horses.

The life cycles of many parasites that infect horses, including small strongyles, rely on pastures. When parasite eggs are expelled with manure, a reservoir of larvae develop in the soil and then re-infect horses as they graze. One way to break this cycle is to remove horses from a pasture until the parasites die off, but some can persist for long periods, which makes this method less reliable.

Working at the University of Santiago de Compostela, researcher­s dewormed 22 mature horses with ivermectin, then divided them into three groups. The first group was kept continuall­y on the same pastures and fed a standard pelleted feed. The second group also received the standard pelleted feed but was rotated among four pastures, allowing each grazing area to “rest” for several weeks at a time. The third group was rotated among four pastures and fed a pelleted grain product infused with spores of two fungi known to eat parasites: Mucor circinello­ides and Duddington­ia flagrans.

Subsequent fecal egg count testing showed that the horses fed the fungi-infused pellets had significan­tly reduced numbers of strongyle eggs in feces for as long as 16 weeks after deworming. By comparison, eggs reappeared 10 weeks after deworming in horses that received standard feed but were rotated among the four paddocks. What’s more, strongyle eggs re-appeared only six weeks after deworming in horses that were keep continuous­ly on the same pastures and were not fed the fungi-infused pellets.

The researcher­s speculate that the M. circinello­ides fungus destroys part of the strongyle eggs shed in the feces, and D. flagrans fungi may create filamentou­s webs that capture and then digest stongyle larvae that develop from the surviving eggs, thus inhibiting the growth of the population. They conclude that strongyle infection in horses “could be decreased by combining rotational pasturing with feeding pellets containing the spores of parasitici­dal fungi.”

 ??  ?? COMPREHENS­IVE: In a recent study, feed infused with parasite-eating fungus and rotational grazing to allow larvae on pastures to die off seemed to reduce parasite loads in horses.
COMPREHENS­IVE: In a recent study, feed infused with parasite-eating fungus and rotational grazing to allow larvae on pastures to die off seemed to reduce parasite loads in horses.

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