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- FactsheetUsing genetics to improve the health of a flock …
- … Last chance to join the ground-breaking Facial Eczema Sheep Poo Study …
- FactsheetB+LNZ commitment to the welfare of sheep and beef cattle …
- PodcastBetter sheep breeding: Buying the right rams for your flock with Annie O’Connell, Beef + Lamb New Zealand Genetics …
- PageIf you want the best information from your worm monitoring, make sure you collect fresh samples and store them correctly. Here’s a quick guide. … It’s best to collect fresh samples by quietly moving the mob of animals to a corner and letting them stand for 5–10 minutes, and then collecting what has been dropped. If it’s not possible to hold a mob somewhere , just let them drift quietly away from you through a gateway or narrow area. Ideally collect ones you’ve actually seen pass out the back …
- PodcastEarly- to late-pregnancy nutritional management of ewes, with Professor Paul Kenyon, Massey University …
- Resource bookSheep and Beef Cattle Health Review Workbook …
- PageThings that can affect FEC results … This topic is a bit of a minefield, and we can’t stress enough that faecal egg counts are a GUIDE to the number of worms inside animals. You must interpret them in light of all other information available! The TREND in FECs can often be as helpful as the absolute numbers. Repeat FEC monitoring of a mob of animals often gives better information than one count in isolation … I’ve got the FEC results – what do they mean? The answer to this question usually …
- B+LNZ calling on farmers for groundbreaking research: we need your sheep poo …