Antiparasitic Tannin-Rich Plants from the South of Europe for Grazing Livestock: A Review.

Animals (Basel)

Department of Animal Production, Cátedra de Producción Ecológica Ecovalia-Clemente Mata, UIC ENZOEM, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, International Agrifood Campus of Excellence (ceiA3), University of Córdoba, Campus de Rabanales, 14071 Córdoba, Spain.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Internal parasites pose significant health risks in livestock production, exacerbated by the widespread use of chemical anti-parasitics despite their negative environmental impact and resistance issues.
  • The review highlights certain plants known for their anti-parasitic properties that are suitable for livestock grazing in Mediterranean climates, emphasizing their potential as alternatives to chemical treatments.
  • The analysis includes data from 87 research papers, primarily focusing on the effects of these plants on gastrointestinal nematodes in ruminant species, with a majority of studies addressing both natural and experimental infections.

Article Abstract

Internal parasites are one of the main causes of health threats in livestock production, especially in extensive livestock farming. Despite the environmental toxic effects (loss of dung beetles, biodiversity, and other issues) and resistance phenomenon derived from their prolonged use, anti-parasitic chemical pharmaceuticals are frequently used, even in organic farming. Such a situation within the context of climate change requires urgent exploration of alternative compounds to solve these problems and apparent conflicts between organic farming objectives regarding the environment, public health, and animal health. This review is focused on some plants ( spp., L., family, L., spp., Scop.) that are well known for their antiparasitic effect, are voluntarily grazed and ingested, and can be spontaneously found or cultivated in southern Europe and other regions with a Mediterranean climate. The differences found between effectiveness, parasite species affected, experiments, and active compounds are explored. A total of 87 papers where antiparasitic activity of those plants have been studied are included in this review; 75% studied the effect on ruminant parasites, where gastrointestinal nematodes were the parasite group most studied (70%), and these included natural (31%) and experimental (37%) infections.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9855007PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani13020201DOI Listing

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