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- The role of lambs, time and space in persistence of Dichelobacter nodosus, the causative agent of footrot (PhD)
The role of lambs, time and space in persistence of Dichelobacter nodosus, the causative agent of footrot (PhD)
Summary
Reduced project results are available below. The final report and full project results will be available in the near future.
Recommendations for treatment of sheep with footrot:
- DO treat even mildly lame lambs and ewes within 3 days of becoming lame (rapid treatment) to reduce the spread of footrot and CODD and so reduce the level of lameness in the flock
- The best treatment for footrot and CODD is antibiotic injection, and topical spray to all 4 feet without trimming hoof horn. Lambs with scald can be treated with topical treatment only
- DO separate treated ewes and lambs wherever possible - this prevents spread of disease
- Rapid treatment minimises use of antibiotics to treat lameness - as there will be less animals to treat
- DO NOT wait until sheep are severely lame before treatment - as this allows spread of footrot and CODD through the flock
- DO NOT trim foot horn
Recommendations around flock management:
- High levels of lameness in ewes are associated with high levels of lameness in lambs.
- DO NOT practice routine foot trimming and footbathing
- DO quarantine new and returning sheep for more than 3 weeks and treat cases of lameness
- DO select replacements from ewes that have never been lame (if you purchase replacements ask your supplier to do this too)
- Vaccination with Footvax™ may reduce levels of lameness after 5 years
The role of the environment:
- Flocks on peat soil have lower levels of lameness in both ewes and lambs than those on other soil types
- Consider ways to reduce the spread of footrot and CODD. These include - low stocking density, regular movement of sheep between fields, separation of lame sheep at treatment until they are sound
The full published papers are both Open Access and can be found at:
Lewis, KE, Green, MJ, Witt, J and Green, Multiple model triangulation to identify factors associated with lameness in British sheep flocks, Preventive Veterinary Medicine, 105395
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0167587721001392
Lewis KE and Green LE, 2020, Management Practices Associated With Prevalence of Lameness in Lambs in 2012–2013 in 1,271 English Sheep Flocks, Frontiers in Veterinary Science, 7:519601, doi: 10.3389/fvets.2020.519601
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fvets.2020.519601/
About this project
The Project
The Challenge
- Lambs are born with some passive immunity that protects them against footrot (including ID) and this protection wanes after several weeks and that they then become susceptible to disease. This results in an epidemic of disease in spring when lambs become susceptible en masse
- Lambs have many contacts with other lambs and ewes in the flock and that this may increase transmission of infectious diseases
- The increase in stocking density of the flock due to lambs on the ground might be sufficient to create the epidemics observed
- Climate is more conducive to spread footrot in spring.
Student
Kate Lewis