Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya

A survey was carried out to determine the level of gastrointestinal parasite infections in cattle, sheep and goats in three Maasai group ranches (Olkarkar, Merueshi and Mbirikani) in Kajiadio District of Kenya. Strongylosis was the most prevalent gastrointestinal infection. Between 60-70 percent of...

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Main Authors: Ndarathi, C.M., Waghela, S., Semenye, P.P.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29309
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author Ndarathi, C.M.
Waghela, S.
Semenye, P.P.
author_browse Ndarathi, C.M.
Semenye, P.P.
Waghela, S.
author_facet Ndarathi, C.M.
Waghela, S.
Semenye, P.P.
author_sort Ndarathi, C.M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A survey was carried out to determine the level of gastrointestinal parasite infections in cattle, sheep and goats in three Maasai group ranches (Olkarkar, Merueshi and Mbirikani) in Kajiadio District of Kenya. Strongylosis was the most prevalent gastrointestinal infection. Between 60-70 percent of the sheep and goats were infected with gastrointestinal parasites, while 40 percent of the cattle were infected. The rate of infection correlated with age in cattle with most of the cases occuring in calves which also suffered heavier parasitison. Coccidiosis was second to strongylosis in prevalence, mainly in calves, kids and lambs. Infection with other parasites was less than 6 percent.
format Journal Article
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spelling CGSpace293092023-02-15T10:07:07Z Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya Ndarathi, C.M. Waghela, S. Semenye, P.P. sheep goats maasai ethnic group helminthoses disease prevalence coccidia age A survey was carried out to determine the level of gastrointestinal parasite infections in cattle, sheep and goats in three Maasai group ranches (Olkarkar, Merueshi and Mbirikani) in Kajiadio District of Kenya. Strongylosis was the most prevalent gastrointestinal infection. Between 60-70 percent of the sheep and goats were infected with gastrointestinal parasites, while 40 percent of the cattle were infected. The rate of infection correlated with age in cattle with most of the cases occuring in calves which also suffered heavier parasitison. Coccidiosis was second to strongylosis in prevalence, mainly in calves, kids and lambs. Infection with other parasites was less than 6 percent. 1989 2013-06-11T09:23:08Z 2013-06-11T09:23:08Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29309 en Limited Access OAU/STRC Bulletin of Animal Health and Production in Africa;37(3):205-208
spellingShingle sheep
goats
maasai ethnic group
helminthoses
disease prevalence
coccidia
age
Ndarathi, C.M.
Waghela, S.
Semenye, P.P.
Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya
title Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya
title_full Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya
title_fullStr Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya
title_short Helminthiasis in Maasai ranches in Kenya
title_sort helminthiasis in maasai ranches in kenya
topic sheep
goats
maasai ethnic group
helminthoses
disease prevalence
coccidia
age
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/29309
work_keys_str_mv AT ndarathicm helminthiasisinmaasairanchesinkenya
AT waghelas helminthiasisinmaasairanchesinkenya
AT semenyepp helminthiasisinmaasairanchesinkenya