Sheep farmers that experience more than 2% of their flock aborting are being urged to contact their vet to take advantage of the subsidised blood testing scheme, FlockCheck.

The scheme, which has been running for more than 15 years, allows flockmasters in Scotland, England and Wales to ask their vet to blood test their flock for exposure to toxoplasmosis and enzootic abortion (EAA). It requires practitioners to take blood samples from six to eight aborted, unvaccinated ewes, or from barren ewes or ones that have produced weakly lambs.

Annual FlockCheck blood test results consistently show that the majority of aborted ewes tested have been exposed to either toxoplasmosis or EAE – and sometimes both. This is consistent with a recent AHPA analysis showing that over the last 18 years (2002 to 2019), EAE and toxoplasmosis have been the most common diagnoses of sheep abortion.

According to MSD Animal Health veterinary adviser Dr Kat Baxter-Smith, both these infectious disease causes of abortion can be responsible for reducing the number of lambs per ewes mated, which can increase workload and stress during lambing. Profit may also be reduced significantly, she stresses, but using FlockCheck can help in improving a flock’s potential and overall economic performance.

For example, toxoplasmosis, caused by infection with the Toxoplasma gondii parasite, does not just cause abortion. It is also the main infectious cause of early embryo loss in sheep and a very common cause of barren ewes or weak, sickly live lambs. It is likely that almost all flocks in Great Britain have been in contact with this global parasite, which means all breeding sheep should be considered at risk.

One of the main reasons for such high levels of toxoplasmosis is that sheep can become infected very easily.

“Sheep pick up the toxoplasma parasite from the environment and so normal biosecurity measures are not enough to control the disease,” said Dr Baxter-Smith.

“Infected cats shed toxoplasma eggs in their faeces and sheep become infected when they ingest these eggs from contaminated pasture, feed and water. The eggs are tough and can survive in the environment for over a year, which means farmers need to take steps to protect their sheep.

“Fortunately, the disease can be controlled effectively by a simple vaccination regime. What’s more, the costs of a vaccination programme can be easily covered by a reduction in future flock barren and abortion rates. Every ewe should have been vaccinated before she breeds because of the widespread disease threat and the significant financial losses,” she says.

The subsidised FlockCheck diagnostic service allows vets to identify whether toxoplasmosis or EAE (or both) are likely to have been involved in any aborted lamb losses, barren ewes or numbers of weak, sickly lambs. This aids the decision for (and identifies the potential value of) pre-tupping vaccination programmes.

Farmers interested in taking advantage of the subsidised FlockCheck diagnostic service and reducing the risk of lower productivity should contact their local practice as soon as possible. This year’s FlockCheck scheme runs until June 30, 2020.