Avoiding Pneumonia at a high-risk time of the year

// Pests and diseases

Weaning, drafting, drenching and shearing all create the perfect environment for pneumonia and pleurisy in lambs, but simple management can reduce the risk of these production limiting diseases.

lambs and ewes

Pneumonia is a disease that causes lesions in the lungs. The most common form is Chronic Non-Progressive Pneumonia which can be caused by bacteria, mycobacteria or viruses.  Symptoms are usually not obvious, although lambs will be slower growing and often have trouble breathing. Lambs will pant following exercise and cough.

Lambs with pneumonia are more likely to develop pleurisy where lungs stick to the chest wall. At processing, affected carcasses are downgraded or condemned.

A 2000/2001 study carried out on a database of 1719 farms in Canterbury, Manawatu and Gisborne found the prevalence of pneumonia ranged from 0-100% per flock, but on average, flocks had 24% of lamb affected. The number of flocks with some pneumonia present ranged from 40-70% – in other words it is very common and costly. Slower growing lambs cost more to feed and then their carcasses are downgraded.

Preventing Pneumonia

  • A healthy animal with good nutrition, up-to-date animal health and minimal stressors are at reduced risk of developing pneumonia.
  • Keep the time of yarding lambs to a minimum. Watering the yards before use can be helpful – and make life more pleasant for humans and dogs.
  • Keep mob sizes small to reduce animal stress and dust inhalation.
  • Avoid shearing lambs at weaning.
  • Minimise stock movement in the middle of the day when dust levels are highest and avoid long distance movements where possible.
  • Reduce the extent and duration of open-mouth panting when mustering or droving lambs. Satellite yards can reduce long-distance movements. Try and reduce pressure on lambs when droving, laneways are ideal as allow lambs to drift at their own pace.

Find out more

For more information see our Pleurisy in sheep factsheet (PDF, 101KB)