Arrested development of Ostertagia ostertagi: effect of the exposure of infective larvae to natural spring conditions of the Humid Pampa (Argentina)

2005 
Abstract The aim of this study was to determine the effect of environmental conditions and the time of exposure to the conditions required for Ostertagia ostertagi to become inhibited in development at the early fourth larval stage in the host. Two comparable experiments were conducted from September to January, experiment I in 1997–1998 and experiment II in 1999–2000. Twenty-thousand third-stage larvae (L3), freshly obtained from coprocultures, were spread in different parasite-free grass plots at the beginning of September, October and November in each experiment and exposed to environmental conditions throughout spring and early summer. Duplicate plots for each exposure period were grazed for 3 days by two dewormed tracer calves after 1, 2, 3, 4 weeks of exposure during the corresponding month, and the remaining plots were grazed for 3 days at monthly intervals until the end of the experimental period. For each month in both experiments, control animals were inoculated orally with 20,000 L3 newly recovered from coprocultures (week 0 animals; infection controls). The control and tracer calves were sacrificed and their parasite burdens analysed. The time required to obtain greater than 50% inhibited larvae (IeL4) in the tracer animals during September and October was 3 weeks, whereas during November around 60% of the parasites were inhibited after one week of exposure. During the period tested, greater than 50% inhibition was found in concurrence with a photoperiod ranging between 13 and 14 h. The highest proportion of IeL4 (75% average) in the animals was found concomitant with a 14 h 43 min photoperiod. A high correlation between the percentage of inhibition and day length was established (0.870 p p
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