
21st Century worm control – are you getting ...
What do you know about worm control? Guidance on the best ways to control worms in horses has changed in recent years and it’...
25 September 2020
Read MoreTo help keep your horse free from illness, you need a proper plan of action for controlling worms. Parasite life cycles are linked to the seasons, so your worming schedule should take into account the time of year.
In addition you need to consider the problem of resistance. The growing threat of worms becoming resistant to the chemical ingredients in wormers means you should always look at the bigger picture – it’s no longer acceptable to simply dose all horses routinely throughout the year. Dosing correctly, as little as possible but as much as necessary, is the key and this can be achieved by assessing every horse individually, always practicing good pasture management and using faecal worm egg counts (FWECs) appropriately.
Spring
This is when encysted small redworms (ESRW) mature and emerge from the large intestine, damaging the gut wall and potentially causing health problems for your horse, including weight loss, diarrhoea colic and sometimes death. If you have tested or treated effectively for ESRW over the winter your horse shouldn’t have a problem; however, if there are any unexplained health problems it is important to contact your vet immediately.
Spring is the perfect time to start faecal worm egg counts (FWECs) to identify horses needing treatment. FWECs are never 100% accurate. This is because not all parasites eggs are easily detectable and some parasite stages don’t lay eggs. To confuse matters further the number of eggs produced by parasites will vary from horses to horse even if they have the same level of worm burden. That said FWECs can indicate horses with particularly high worm burdens and can also identify the horses passing (shedding) the most eggs and contaminating the pasture – which is very important to know.
Treat your horse in spring for:
Summer
Ideal environmental conditions for the development of eggs and larvae on the pasture in the spring may lead to high pasture contamination and increase the potential for your horse to acquire new parasite burdens.
In summer you can easily reduce pasture contamination by poo-picking at least twice a week.1
Ideally you should also conduct an FWEC every two to three months to identify horses that need dosing for redworms, which are the main summer culprits, and those that don’t.
Treat your horse in summer for:
Autumn
In autumn, most parasites are entering a less active phase and pasture contamination is reduced. Ideally you should continue with FWECs until the end of the grazing season (roughly when the grass stops growing) and if your horse has a strongyle count of >200epg he should be treated.
Depending on their age, many young foals may need their second roundworm dose in autumn too.
In late autumn if your horse has picked up any new small redworm larvae from the pasture these may encyst within the gut wall and they must be tested or treated for. In addition late autumn/early winter is the time to tackle tapeworm and bots:
Winter
This is a deceptively quiet time of year for horse parasites. Roundworm eggs can lie dormant in the soil for long periods, even in freezing weather. Small redworms (cyathostomes) will ‘hibernate’ in their encysted state in your horse’s gut wall and won’t lay any eggs so a faecal worm egg count will not reveal them.
Treat your horse in winter for:
In addition to these seasonal threats ensure at least one of the doses given throughout the year is effective against large redworm. Pinworm, liver fluke and lungworm may be a concern for some horses – it’s best to talk to your vet to check if your horse may be at risk of these.
Related links
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/tag/worms-and-worming
http://www.moredun.org.uk/research/research-@-moredun/parasitic-worms/parasite-control-in-horses
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