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Social behaviour and transmission of lameness in a flock of ewes and lambs. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sheep have diverse social connections that affect the spread of footrot, a significant infectious disease in sheep, particularly transmitted through contaminated surfaces.
  • High-resolution sensors were used on 40 ewes and 54 lambs in a flock with chronic footrot to assess locomotion and identify cases of lameness over 13 days.
  • Results showed that both family interactions and individual behaviors influenced the transmission of lameness, with single lambs showing higher lameness rates than twins, while most contact occurred within families rather than across the flock.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Sheep have heterogenous social connections that influence transmission of some infectious diseases. Footrot is one of the top five globally important diseases of sheep, it is caused by and transmits between sheep when infectious feet contaminate surfaces, e.g., pasture. Surfaces remain infectious for a few minutes to a few days, depending on surface moisture levels. Susceptible sheep in close social contact with infectious sheep might be at risk of becoming infected because they are likely to step onto infectious footprints, particularly dams and lambs, as they cluster together.

Methods: High resolution proximity sensors were deployed on 40 ewes and their 54 lambs aged 5-27 days, in a flock with endemic footrot in Devon, UK for 13 days. Sheep locomotion was scored daily by using a 0-6 integer scale. Sheep were defined lame when their locomotion score (LS) was ≥2, and a case of lameness was defined as LS ≥2 for ≥2 days.

Results: Thirty-two sheep (19 ewes, 9 single, and 4 twin lambs) became lame during the study, while 14 (5 ewes, 5 single, and 4 twin lambs) were lame initially. These 46 sheep were from 29 family groups, 14 families had >1 lame sheep, and transmission from ewes to lambs was bidirectional. At least 15% of new cases of footrot were from within family transmission; the occurrence of lameness was higher in single than twin lambs. At least 4% of transmission was due to close contact across the flock. Most close contact occurred within families. Single and twin lambs spent 1.5 and 0.9 hours/day with their dams, respectively, and twin lambs spent 3.7 hours/day together. Non-family sheep spent only 0.03 hours/day in contact. Lame single lambs and ewes spent less time with non-family sheep, and lame twin lambs spent less time with family sheep.

Discussion: We conclude that most transmission of lameness is not attributable to close contact. However, in ewes with young lambs, some transmission occurs within families and is likely due to time spent in close contact, since single lambs spent more time with their dam than twin lambs and were more likely to become lame.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9753574PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2022.1027020DOI Listing

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