Behavioural assessment of sheep is sensitive to level of gastrointestinal parasite infection

2019 
Abstract Qualitative behavioural assessment (QBA) was applied to investigate the expressive behaviour of sheep with varying intestinal parasite burdens over two experiments. The expressive behaviour of sheep naturally infected with intestinal parasites was assessed from video footage collected in the paddock, and assessments were compared pre- and post-treatment with anthelmintic drench. The first experiment assessed sheep with a range of parasite burdens (n = 28), and the second compared sheep that expressed clinical symptoms of parasitism (Anaemic, n = 5) with those that did not (Non-anaemic, n = 5). Behavioural expression scores were validated against individual clinical evaluations (faecal egg counts – FEC, faecal consistency and anaemia scores), production parameters (body mass and body condition score), and quantitative locomotive measures (walking speed and return order to paddock). Twenty-two observers scored 28 video clips using QBA in experiment 1, and in the second experiment, 35 observers scored 20 video clips that depicted the 10 focal sheep pre- and post-treatment. QBA scores were analysed using Generalised Procrustes Analysis (GPA), and sheep scores on the main GPA dimensions were evaluated in relation to parasite burden using Spearman Rank correlations and repeated-measures ANOVA for experiment 1 and 2, respectively. In both experiments, observers reached significant (P
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