Site Admin


Newspapers
NZ Herald
Waikato Times
Dominion Post
Christchurch Press
Otago Daily Times
Southland Times
Country wide
Rural News
Straight Furrow
The New Zealand Farmers Weekly


Radio
Radio NZ
Farming show
News Talk ZB


Academic
Lincoln University
Massey University


Government
MAF
AgResearch


Trade and Industry

Deer Industry NZ
Meat and Wool NZ
Federated Farmers NZ
Merino NZ
Fonterra


For more perspectives, see ...
- Exchange rates
- Commodity prices
- Farm cost indexes
- Interest rate trends
- Rural credit aggregates
- Farm sales activity
- International dairy prices

for saleyard and processor price trend graphs, see...
- lamb
- beef
- deer
- velvet

and for comments on agricultural issues, see...
-commentary

Posts Tagged ‘Worm resistance’

Barbers Pole cut down to size by clover

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

A common pasture plant could help foraging ruminants ward off damaging gastrointestinal nematodes, like barber’s pole that can cause illness and death, US Agricultural Research Service (ARS) scientists report in the Gisborne Herald. Animal scientist Joan Burke at the ARS Dale Bumpers Small Farms Research Centre in Booneville, Arkansas, along with colleagues at several universities, has patented formulations of Sericea lespedeza, commonly referred to as Chinese bush clover.

The plant was introduced in the United States in the 1930s to minimise soil erosion. Adding the patented dry hay and pelleted forms of this plant to animal feed thwarts the reproductive cycles of gastrointestinal nematodes that are in the digestive tracts of goats and sheep. It is particularly effective in controlling the barber’s pole worm (Haemonchus contortus), a nematode that attaches to the animals’ abomasal (true stomach) wall and feeds on their blood. Female worms can produce more than 5,000 eggs per day that are shed in the animal’s manure.

(more…)