Publications by authors named "Paul Candy"

Whilst healthy adult farmed red deer show little clinical indication of parasite infection, they may still be maintaining infection levels on the farm through low-level shedding of nematode eggs and lungworm larvae. This work was undertaken to establish the long-term distribution of parasite counts, to determine whether the higher counts seen in previous trials are repeatable across the same animals. All adult female red deer on a New Zealand North Island property were faecal sampled (n = 209), weighed, and body condition scored (BCS) on five sampling occasions from March - August 2021.

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In nematodes that invade the gastro-intestinal tract of the ruminant, the process of larval exsheathment marks the transition from the free-living to the parasitic stages of these parasites. To investigate the secretome associated with larval exsheathment, a closed in vitro system that effectively reproduces the two basic components of an anaerobic rumen environment (CO and 39 °C) was developed to trigger exsheathment in one of the most pathogenic and model gastrointestinal parasitic nematodes, (barber's pole worm). This study reports the use of multimodal untargeted metabolomics and lipidomics methodologies to identify the metabolic signatures and compounds secreted during in vitro larval exsheathment in the infective third-stage larva (iL3).

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Farmed red deer face challenges from nematode parasites, primarily the pulmonary species Dictyocaulus eckerti and the complex of Ostertagiinae nematodes in the abomasum. Previous investigations on New Zealand deer farms identified limited seasonality in faecal egg and larval output in all stock classes, however, this does not indicate the key times of year those eggs develop into infective-stage larvae, and subsequently contribute to infection risk. A simple temperature-driven model was developed for the free-living stages of a representative deer-specific Ostertagiinae species; Ostertagia leptospicularis.

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Gastrointestinal nematode parasites and lungworm are significant animal health issues for farmed wapiti and red deer (Cervus elaphus). Chronic infection with gastrointestinal nematodes, coupled with sporadic, often pathogenic, outbreaks of the lungworm Dictyocaulus eckerti in young deer has resulted in many farmers relying heavily on anthelmintic treatments. An improved understanding of the epidemiology of the parasites infecting farmed deer, including the sources and seasonality of pasture contamination on the farm, is essential to the development of more integrated and sustainable control programs.

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A group of 5 lambs (Host 1-5) was infected with the same batch of Haemonchus contortus and after patency individual faecal samples were collected, separately incubated at 23 °C for 14 days and third stage larvae collected through Baermannisation. Life-history traits were compared between larvae from different hosts: the length of the larvae was measured by microscope image analysis, larval survival in water at 35 °C, larval susceptibility to ivermectin (EC) in a migration assay, the proportion of larvae exsheathing in vitro and the proportion establishing to the adult stage in young lambs. For all traits there were significant differences between the host animals, with larvae from specific hosts following a consistent pattern of displaying the highest or lowest trait results.

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A replicated field trial was conducted to measure the effect on liveweight gain of failing to adequately control anthelmintic resistant populations of Cooperia oncophora and to determine whether populations, and hence production losses, increased with time. Eight mobs of 10 Friesian-Hereford calves were run on independent farmlets from January to December, over each of two years. All mobs were routinely treated with a pour-on formulation of eprinomectin every six weeks, which controlled parasites other than Cooperia.

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