Ovine helminthosis, a major health constraint to productivity of sheep in Ethiopia
- 1 June 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Animal Health Research Reviews
- Vol. 7 (1-2) , 107-118
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s1466252307001132
Abstract
Small ruminants represent an important component of the Ethiopian livestock production system, providing 12% of the value of livestock products consumed at the farm level and 48% of the cash income generated. Ethiopia is second in Africa and sixth in the world in terms of sheep population. The country has, however, benefited little from this enormous resource owing to a multitude of problems, disease being the most important. Disease alone accounts for mortalities of 30% in lambs and 20% in adults. Productivity losses attributable to helminth parasites are often substantial. A loss of US[dollar] 81.8 million is reported annually due to helminth parasites. In a country confronted with challenges of an ever-rising human population and food shortage, such enormous losses caused by helminth parasites, ‘the silent predators’, are intolerable. Therefore, helminth control should receive special attention in poverty reduction strategies through improved productivity of livestock if the present and future challenges of food shortage are to be addressed. Productivity loss due to helminth infections can be substantially reduced through implementation of effective disease control strategies, which require an understanding of the epidemiology and ecology of parasites and parasitic infections under local conditions. This paper reviews extensive evidence demonstrating that helminthosis is a major constraint to productivity of sheep in Ethiopia. It also discusses epidemiology and ecology of major helminth parasites in the country and suggests strategies for improved control in various agro-ecological zones and production systems.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Genetic resistance to endoparasites in sheep and goats. A review of genetic resistance to gastrointestinal nematode parasites in sheep and goats in the tropics and evidence for resistance in some sheep and goat breeds in sub-humid coastal KenyaAnimal Genetic Resources Information, 1998
- An Active Intermediate Host Role for Man in the Life Cycle of Echinococcus Granulosus in Turkana, KenyaThe American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1983
- Hydatid disease in the Turkana District of KenyaPathogens and Global Health, 1982
- The influence of breed on the susceptibility of sheep and goats to a single experimental infection with Haemonchus contortusVeterinary Record, 1978
- The Interrelationship of Lymnaea Truncatula and Ovine Fascioliasis in the Ethiopian Central HighlandsBritish Veterinary Journal, 1978
- The Epidemiology and Anthelmintic Control of Ovine Fascioliasis in the Ethiopian Central HighlandsBritish Veterinary Journal, 1977