Nematode killing fungi: An alternative control for gastrointestinal parasites Dec 2015 R4D Highlights Research By Khrizie Evert Padre Parasitic gastrointestinal nematodes cause disease infestation among grazed buffaloes resulting in severe economic losses brought about by poor health, weight and reproduction performance. Effect of the Nematophagous Fungi Duddingtonia flagrans (D.flagrans) as a Biological Control against Common Strongyle Roundworms on Buffaloes (Bubalus Bubalis). This problematic scenario in the livestock industry can now be avoided, as shown in a study titled, “Effect of the Nematophagous Fungi Duddingtonia flagrans (D.flagrans) as a Biological Control against Common Strongyle Roundworms on Buffaloes (Bubalus Bubalis)”. The research was conducted by a research team led by Toni Rose Barroga of the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of the Philippines Los Baños, Laguna (UPLB). Anti-parasitic drugs like anthelmintic is presently being used to control internal parasites. But due to the indiscriminate use of anthelmintics which leads to resistance toward parasites, alternative methods of control have been introduced. Earlier studies indicated that biological control of internal parasites is a potentially useful alternative control strategy. Barroga’s research focused on the use of nematode-trapping fungi, particularly D.flagrans, for reducing pasture contamination and infection by targeting the free-living larval stages outside the host. Results of this research suggest that D. flagrans has the ability to survive the gastrointestinal tract because it can abundantly produce thick-walled resting spores, known as the chlamydospores, and forms a specialized 3-dimensional sticky network that trap the developing parasite soon after it has been deposited on the ground. The researcher opted to use three in-vitro experiments: Corn Meal Agar Assay (CMA), Chlamydospore per Gram (CG) Assay and Chlamydospore per Egg (CE) Assay while an in-vivo study was conducted to prove the efficacy of D. flagrans as a biological anthelmintic administered orally. The CMA was done to test the predatory activity of D.flagrans to strongyle larvae after 48 hours of incubation. Meanwhile, the CG and CE assay were conducted to evaluate the efficacy of D. flagrans chlamydospores on a per gram basis of feces respectively, through determination of percent larval reduction in the fecal larval culture. To prove the effectiveness of D. flagrans as a biological anthelmintic in the animal, increasing doses of chlamydospore suspension were administered to the experimental buffaloes. In-vitro experiment using CMA assay showed lower larvae counts on D.flagrans-treated group compared with non-treated groups. In the CG assay, the fecal samples with 2,100 egg/g (EPG) strongyles were treated with increasing doses of chlamydospores/g feces (100,000, 250,000, and 500,000). There was an 84.39% larval reduction rate after treating with 500,000 chlamydospore/g feces. The use of CE assay, on the other hand, was evaluated with varying treatment ratios (1:100, 1:500 and 1:1000) using the 2,100 EPG feces. It was noted that the 1:500 ratio recorded the highest larval reduction at 78.88%. In the in-vivo study, after five consecutive days of administering the chlamydospore suspension orally among the fungal treated animals at varying concentrations (50,000, 150,000 and 250,000 chlamydospores/kg body weight (BW), the highest larval reduction was recorded at 78.77% with the lowest chlamydospores treatment (50,000 chlamydospores/kg BW) while the lowest larval reduction was observed at 65% with the highest chlamydospores treatment (250,000 chlamydospores/kg BW). The result, according to the researcher, establishes the effectiveness of D.flagrans in buffaloes at 50,000 chlamydospores/kg BW. The findings also indicate that it is not necessary to administer higher doses of chlamydospore because a low dose would suffice. The study concludes that using D. flagrans as a biological control agent for gastrointestinal parasites is a promising alternative where anthelmintic resistance is a problem. The researcher recommended further research on the economic impact of using D. flagrans, detailing on the financial loss and gains on non-parasitized and parasitized infected herd. More studies should also be conducted to test the ability of D. flagrans to reduce larval pasture contamination. Barroga was bestowed with the best paper and best presenter awards for this particular study in the recent Philippine Carabao Center’s (PCC) R4D In-House Review. She also bagged the UPLB “Best Undergraduate Thesis” in water buffaloes and PSAS “Best Paper in Medicine and Surgery” for the same paper. The members of her team were Dr. Claro N. Mingala, Scientist II of the PCC National Headquarters and Gene Pool, and Therese Marie A. Collantes of UPLB. This study was supported by the PCC.
Terms and Conditions Welcome to DA-PCC Knowledge Portal (K-Portal)! Thank you for visiting k-portal.pcc.gov.ph website. Subscription to the K-Portal is free. We don’t charge you to use or access this platform. Your privacy and security are very important to us. Please read the information below for your guidance. Data Policy To provide you with the services of our K-Portal, we must process information about you. We do not collect your personal information unless you choose to provide them. Rest assured that we do not share or sell your personal information but we do collect technical information about your visit to our website. When you visit k-portal.pcc.gov.ph website, our system automatically stores: Your personal information that you provided for subscription (email, password, name) Date and time of subscription Words or information you searched for The publications/ categories you viewed on our website The items you clicked on our website Your comments Items you downloaded from our website This process does not collect or track any of your personal information but makes our website more useful to visitors. Through such information, we learn about the number of visitors to our website, detect operational problems, and continuously improve the website’s overall functionality and security. Your comments will be visible to the public. Please make sure to not share information that you do not want made available to the public. We will not be responsible for how other visitors may use your information. Please be reminded that when you voluntarily submit information, it constitutes your voluntary consent to the use of the information you submit for the website’s improvement and maintenance. General Disclaimer and Copyright Notice All the contents uploaded to our website are considered public information, which can be used as reference and may be shared but we strictly request that our agency, DA-PCC, and our knowledge portal website including authors of knowledge products be cited as the source of any information, photos, and images copied from this site and that any photo credits or bylines be similarly credited to the photographer or author. The articles, publications pdf, AVPs, books, manuals and other materials owned by DA-PCC should be directly acquired from the knowledge portal and not through other sources that may change the information in some way or exclude material crucial to the understanding of that information. Disclaimer While we make every effort to provide accurate and complete information, some information may change between site updates. With a lot of articles and documents available and uploaded within short deadlines, we cannot guarantee that there will be no errors. We make no claims, promises or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of the contents of this website and expressly disclaim liability for errors and omissions in the contents of this website.