Abstract
Lambs were infected at daily intervals from 3 weeks of age with increasing doses of infective larvae of Trichostrongylus colubriformis, according to an exponential infection schedule designed to simulate the pattern of infection experienced by grazing lambs during the spring and early summer in Britain. The faecal egg counts and the worm burdens in the lambs followed a similar exponential trend for 12 weeks after initial infection.The T. colubriformis burdens in these lambs appeared to be cumulative during the first 12 weeks, after which the animals developed a resistance to further reinfection, which was very strong by 16 weeks after initial infection. However, even lambs which were refractory to new infection continued to harbour large numbers of adult worms, which caused clinical disease in most of the lambs.There was no evidence to suggest that either a turnover of the worm burden, inhibition of larval development or the sudden loss of established parasites played any major role in the regulation of the burdens of T. colubriformis in these young lambs.The removal of the established burden 16 weeks after initial infection in one lamb appeared to result in a partial loss of resistance to a challenge infection given 10 days later.