Quarantine drenching

Learn about when you should administer a quarantine drench, what to use, and importantly – what to do afterwards! 

The ‘why’ of quarantine 

The aim of a quarantine drench to bought-in stock is to prevent the importation of multi-drench-resistant worms onto your property.  

You probably have worms with some level of drench resistance already – but you want to ensure you don’t make this worse by importing worms with nastier genetics than the ones already there! 

Bought-in lambs and calves represent the biggest risk of importing drench-resistant worms, but those buying in replacement ewes of unknown status should also have a properly thought-out quarantine protocol in place. 

Do they need a quarantine? 

Note: The following is not an exhaustive list – it’s a set of examples that you may find helpful. 

Definitely  Young stock (lambs or calves) that have already had several combination treatments. Lambs or calves from vendor of unknown or poor drench resistance status. Large line of any sheep from property with unknown or poor resistance status. Calves from large scale rearers, unless vendor can provide you with drench testing data to show that the common drench classes are highly effective. 
Maybe  Beef weaners from cow breeding system (these are generally low drench use systems and have low risk of developing resistant worms). Cattle in the 1 year – 2 year age group with a history of high drench use (e.g. dairy beef or dairy heifers) – poorly grown ones could easily have production-limiting resistant worms on board, big well-conditioned ones; less so. 
Probably not  Individual 2th sire rams (a small number of animals won’t bring in enough worms to change your status). Adult cows. Adult bulls.

What with?

illustration of drenching gun

Protocol – as important as the product 

  • Drenching with a flash product could be useless if the quarantine procedure isn’t managed properly.
  • Your drench does not kill worm eggs – only adults and larvae.
  • You need to be mindful of the eggs that will continue to pass out of your new stock until the worms that are laying them are dead.  

While a highly effective quarantine drench will knock out the adult and immature worms in the gut within say 12 hours of dosing, it may take much longer for the eggs already laid to pass out of the animal.  

So there will be a period of time (1–3 days) where your highly effective drench has killed all the adults and larvae, but there are still resistant eggs passing out in the faeces.  

Gold standard on arrival 

New arrivals are held in a bare yard or on grating, with feed and water available, for 24-48 hours. Eggs that pass out and hatch into larvae have no moisture and no grass blades to live in, so they perish. This is easy to do for calves and dairy lambs who are used to eating supplement. For other lambs, it can be tough. Some finishers provide lambs with high quality silage for them to pick at. Others can organise the lambs to be dosed before they leave the vendor, such that 24 hours has elapsed by the time the lambs arrive. 

‘Compromise’ on arrival 

Newly arrived young stock are put into a specific quarantine paddock for 24-48 hours. This is then not grazed with the same species for many months. For instance adult cattle are the only stock that graze a lamb quarantine paddock for 6 months. This system is easy to manage if new arrivals are only coming in over a short period. If new arrivals come in over a long period, you risk creating a ‘resistant worm hotspot’ that will be harder to clean up, and where ‘super-resistant’ worms might arise. Earmarking a quarantine paddock for immediate spray-out and cropping is another possible solution. 

Beyond the first 24 to 48 hours 

Graze new arrivals on ‘well contaminated’ areas of the farm for at least a few days – any resistant eggs that pass out should be ‘diluted’ by the mixed worm population already present. Certainly don’t put quarantine drenched stock onto new grass or other low-contamination areas.