
Larvae of the cattle lungworm Dictyocaulus viviparus were cultured in experimental units of 200 g cattle faeces placed in semi-transparent trays in the laboratory. In each of 4 experimental series using this experimental unit, chlamydospores (chl) of the nematode-trapping fungus Duddingtonia flagrans were admixed to half of the faecal cultures in a concentration of 50.000 chl/g. In all 4 series there was a significant reduction in the development and subsequent release of infective lungworm larvae from faecal cultures containing chlamydospores. The average reduction in larval release, caused by fungal spores, was 86%.
Incidence, Cattle Diseases, Spores, Fungal, Dictyocaulus, Feces, Dictyocaulus Infections, Mucorales, Animals, Cattle, Mitosporic Fungi, Pest Control, Biological, Parasite Egg Count
Incidence, Cattle Diseases, Spores, Fungal, Dictyocaulus, Feces, Dictyocaulus Infections, Mucorales, Animals, Cattle, Mitosporic Fungi, Pest Control, Biological, Parasite Egg Count
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