Worms on pasture

You’ll have heard the mantra ‘95% of worms on your farm are on pasture’. Learn about the drivers of worm challenge on your pastures so you can reduce worm intake by susceptible stock. 

image of wormwise image showing section elements

Where do the larvae live? 

The vast majority of your total worm population (85 to 95%!) lives on pasture – as L3 larvae.

The rest are:

  • In the soil – a few larvae and eggs.
  • In dung pats – eggs and developing larvae.
  • Inside your animals – as juvenile worms, adults and eggs.

Think of your farm as a worm iceberg. Killing worms at the very top (inside your animals) is part of controlling them. But if you don’t include the rest of the iceberg in your management plan, you’ll never progress.  

graph showing where the larvae live

Ground zero  

The top 1 cm of your soil is a part of the worm iceberg. 

Next level  

  • The lower sward (bottom 2.5 cm of your pasture) makes up much of the rest of the worm iceberg, especially in sheep-grazed pasture. 
  • For cattle-grazed pasture the lower sward is ‘the bottom 1/3rd of the pasture’.
  • More L3 larvae like to live in the lower sward if pasture forms dense mat (think browntop).
  • There are relatively fewer larvae where the sward is more open (short rotation grasses and forage crops). 
  • Bare ground is barely hospitable at all!  

Keep your animals’ mouths out of the lower sward, and you’ll win three ways: 

  1. They’ll be better fed overall (this is #1!!)
  2. They’ll take in less L3’s
  3. You’ll be keeping them away from that larvae-infested soil as well.
larvae like grass diagram showing three types of grass

Top floor  

The top 2/3rds of the pasture is the safest grazing zone, where your susceptible animals are least likely to ingest larvae with their grass.

Larvae are more likely to be active in the upper sward under warm conditions when there are plenty of moisture droplets on the leaves for them to move upwards. 

They’ll move further down as conditions dry out, so they can remain in a moisture film.

Want to really minimise the risk of your animals getting infected by worms? Graze forages with wide leaves and an open growth habit. Examples are chicory, clovers, plantain and brassicas. New Zealand research has shown these can carry fewer larvae than grass. Plus they’re often more nourishing, meaning young animals grow out faster, requiring less drench inputs as they reach a mature size earlier. 

Short term crops that are grazed down to open ground and re-sown in another forage (+/- culitavtion), give an extra opportunity to knock back larvae though the re-sowing process, where there is no/minimal vegetation for larvae to survive on. Cultivation can further disrupt larvae in the soil layer. 

It’s not a given though that these forages will always be completely worm-free, especially if there are extensive grass edges around them. Monitoring is critical to double-check that parasite challenge is indeed low. 

Seasonal patterns of worm larvae on pasture 

image of graph showing seasonal growth of larvae