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Unveiling the hidden threat: investigating gastrointestinal parasites and their costly impact on slaughtered livestock. [PDF]
Rizwan HM +10 more
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Prevalence and risk factors of human trichostrongylosis in Satun, southern Thailand. [PDF]
Kusolsuk T +8 more
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Journal of Comparative Pathology, 2021
Calicophoron daubneyi is the primary rumen fluke (RF) found in Europe in ruminants and infection is more common in cattle than in sheep. The incidence of RF has appeared to increase greatly throughout Europe in the last 10-15 years, with outbreaks of clinical paramphistomosis confirmed in ruminants in many countries, including Great Britain and Ireland.
Caroline Fenemore +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Calicophoron daubneyi is the primary rumen fluke (RF) found in Europe in ruminants and infection is more common in cattle than in sheep. The incidence of RF has appeared to increase greatly throughout Europe in the last 10-15 years, with outbreaks of clinical paramphistomosis confirmed in ruminants in many countries, including Great Britain and Ireland.
Caroline Fenemore +2 more
openaire +2 more sources
Presence and species identity of rumen flukes in cattle and sheep in the Netherlands [PDF]
The purpose of the study was to gain knowledge about the prevalence and identity of rumen flukes (RF) in cattle and sheep in the Netherlands. Routine faecal examinations of diagnostic submissions between May 2009 and September 2014 showed a mean annual herd or flock RF prevalence of 15.8% for cattle and 8.0% for sheep.
H W Ploeger +2 more
exaly +4 more sources
Identity of rumen fluke in deer
Parasitology Research, 2014As evidence is growing that in many temperate areas paramphistome infections are becoming more common and widespread, this study was undertaken to determine the role of deer as reservoirs for rumen fluke infections in livestock. A total of 144 deer faecal samples (88 from fallow deer, 32 from red deer and 24 samples from sika, sika/red deer hybrids ...
Ailis, O'Toole +6 more
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Rumen fluke (paramphistomosis) in British cattle
Veterinary Record, 2008SIR, — Rumen flukes, including Paramphistomum species, have a worldwide distribution and are considered to be important parasites of a number of ruminant species, particularly in tropical and subtropical areas.
Foster, A. P. +6 more
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THE LIFE HISTORY OF THE RUMEN FLUKES OF CATTLE IN NEW ZEALAND
Australian Veterinary Journal, 1950exaly +3 more sources
Control of rumen and liver fluke in livestock
Veterinary Record, 2020> Liver fluke is known to have a major effect on ruminant production, health and welfare I am conducting a study with the aim to better understand rumen fluke in the UK, and …
openaire +2 more sources
Rumen fluke in South American camelids in Great Britain
Veterinary Record, 2017Rumen fluke infections have been increasingly diagnosed in cattle and sheep in Great Britain in recent years (Foster and others 2008), primarily through the detection of rumen fluke eggs in faecal samples, with a peak in total diagnoses in 2013 after the wet summer and autumn of 2012 (APHA 2015).
Millar, Mick +8 more
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Rumen fluke: past, present and future
Livestock, 2018There has been a rapid expansion in the range of the rumen fluke species Calicophoron daubneyi over the last decade in the UK and Ireland, preceded by a similar increase in France from 1990. The reasons for this are unclear, but this species of rumen fluke utilises the mud snail, Galba truncatula, as its intermediate host, in contrast to other ...
exaly +2 more sources

