Prospect of timely cleaning of livestock complexes from accumulated manure prevents environmental pollution. For this purpose, the most promising was the “cold” method of dehelminthization of a heap of manure, complete neutralization of chicken manure when heated and dried at temperatures above 100 °C, a “dry” method for neutralizing horse, pig, cow, sheep manure from helminth eggs using the Kranz biothermal method. For dehelminthization of humans and animals, science has recommended, and practice has successfully tested a fairly large, constantly growing and updated range of highly effective anthelmintics, mainly for gastrointestinal and partially for pulmonary helminthiasis
© 2019 It is increasingly difficult to manage and control gastrointestinal nematode parasites in pas...
The use of anthelmintics is strongly limited in organic farming. This may induce a change in the int...
The purpose of the research is testing the effectiveness of a new method of group deworming of sheep...
All grazing ruminants harbour parasites and in particular digestive-tract strongyles. In organic f...
Objective of research: the sanitary-veterinary and economic evaluation of the disinfecting effect of...
In this work was developed and implemented a thermal fogging disinfection system to counteract patho...
Helminth infections have large negative impacts on production efficiency in ruminant farming systems...
Objective of research: Parasitic diseases of which helminthoses are the most dangerous, lead to decr...
The purpose of research - the search of new, economical and safe ways small ruminant’s group dewormi...
Gastrointestinal helminth parasites impact on livestock production systems throughout the world, and...
Infections with gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) remain a major threat for ruminant production, heal...
Overall, the goal is to overcome the management of manure as waste and the agricultural lands need f...
With the advent of helminth parasite populations that have developed resistance to anthelmintics ove...
In the farms of the Udmurt Republic, the most common endoparasites of cattle are Fasciola hepatica, ...
The purpose of the research is to forecast the epizootic situation in main helminthosis of farm live...
© 2019 It is increasingly difficult to manage and control gastrointestinal nematode parasites in pas...
The use of anthelmintics is strongly limited in organic farming. This may induce a change in the int...
The purpose of the research is testing the effectiveness of a new method of group deworming of sheep...
All grazing ruminants harbour parasites and in particular digestive-tract strongyles. In organic f...
Objective of research: the sanitary-veterinary and economic evaluation of the disinfecting effect of...
In this work was developed and implemented a thermal fogging disinfection system to counteract patho...
Helminth infections have large negative impacts on production efficiency in ruminant farming systems...
Objective of research: Parasitic diseases of which helminthoses are the most dangerous, lead to decr...
The purpose of research - the search of new, economical and safe ways small ruminant’s group dewormi...
Gastrointestinal helminth parasites impact on livestock production systems throughout the world, and...
Infections with gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) remain a major threat for ruminant production, heal...
Overall, the goal is to overcome the management of manure as waste and the agricultural lands need f...
With the advent of helminth parasite populations that have developed resistance to anthelmintics ove...
In the farms of the Udmurt Republic, the most common endoparasites of cattle are Fasciola hepatica, ...
The purpose of the research is to forecast the epizootic situation in main helminthosis of farm live...
© 2019 It is increasingly difficult to manage and control gastrointestinal nematode parasites in pas...
The use of anthelmintics is strongly limited in organic farming. This may induce a change in the int...
The purpose of the research is testing the effectiveness of a new method of group deworming of sheep...