Fecal egg counts
can be very effective for understanding patterns
of infection and where parasite management needs
to be changed, or to determine if a change is
helping. This is done by randomly selecting a
group of animals (six to twelve head) to follow
during the warm season (assuming the Barberpole
worm is the major parasite in your area). We
will follow these same animals throughout the
warm season, so it may be useful to mark them
with an additional eartag or other mark to
enable them to be readily sorted for sampling.
The best way to randomly sample your animals is
if you have 100 animals and want to select 10
animals to follow, select every tenth animal
that goes through the chute. The first animals
to the chute are usually healthier whereas the
last animals are less healthy and more prone to
worms, so we want to select some of each kind of
animal. The time to start will vary for
different geographical areas, but one should
probably start monitoring animals when daily
temperatures are getting into the 70's.
Generally, taking fecal samples every three
weeks is adequate to monitor the level of
parasitism. It is also useful if one can keep a
record of rainfall since moisture is important
for eggs to develop into infective larvae.
Recording other animal management practices such
as which pasture was grazed, when moved,
supplemental feed, kidding or lambing, etc. can
assist one in interpreting fecal egg count
pattern. If fecal egg counts are graphed, one
can often observe when the infection level has
increased in animals. One has to think back to
what happened four to eight weeks prior to the
increase in fecal egg counts because it takes
three to four weeks from the time your animal
picks up infective larvae until those larvae are
mature worms, producing eggs. The second
article in this series (published in April) on
the biology of the parasite can help in
understanding why fecal egg counts increased and
some management options to help prevent it next
year. Your veterinarian, state sheep/goat
extension specialist, parasitologist can help
you with interpreting the data as well as
suggesting changes in management.
Fecal egg
counting procedure
There are many
procedures for determining fecal egg counts and
many variations of each procedure according to
equipment available. There are references to
other procedures on the web at the end of the
article. The McMaster fecal egg counting
procedure is a good technique to monitor
parasite level of grazing animals and is
commonly used for parasite research. It is the
method of choice for producers because of
quantitative data and simplicity.
Collecting
samples
A. Watch goats
drop pellets, collect fresh pellets and record
animal numbers. The pellets should still be
glossy when collected.
B. Use patient
examination glove, lubricate with water or spit
and tease 5-6 pellets out of the rectum.
Store in labeled
(with animal name or number) ziplock bags on ice
or in refrigerator for up to 7 days before doing
fecal egg counts. Do Not Freeze! If fecal
samples are not refrigerated, they can start to
hatch in several hours at warm temperatures,
reducing fecal egg counts. Samples can also be
stored in patient examination gloves by closing
the open end of the glove with a rubber band and
writing numbers on glove with sharpie marking
pen.
Principle of
Fecal egg counting procedure
Loosen worm eggs
trapped between fecal particles and separate
eggs by floating them away from fecal
particles. Must use proper ratio of feces and
solution to get correct eggs/gram.
Choose one of the
following flotation solutions.
A. Add 1 cup
water to 1 1/4 cup sugar and mix (easiest to
mix, good choice)
B. 34% solution
of zinc sulfate (used for footbath)
C. Saturated
Sodium Nitrate solution (28% N, fertilizer)
D. Saturated
solution of salt, rock salt or uniodized salt
(requires heating and a lot of stirring)
E. Can purchase
Fecasol or generic fecal float solution for
$5-10./gal from vet supply house (requires a
prescription from your vet)
Equipment needed
Microscope 10X objective 10X wide field (WF)
eyepiece, mechanical stage is handy.
Can get one for
$75.00 EZ Scope
http://www.microscopes-for-children.com
Model MEZ 119 (do a web search for MEZ-119 for
sources). Many children’s or toy microscopes
have a narrow field of view ie, cannot see lines
on both sides of lane of McMaster slide.
You can get a
used microscope from many places E-bay,
classified ads in newspaper. Your high school
science teacher may help you get access to a
microscope. Your vet or the doctor’s lab tech
may have an old microscope that they can sell
you cheap. You can find out who services their
microscopes since they may also sell used
microscopes. Some friends or relatives may have
a microscope from their college days stashed in
the attic.
McMaster slide
(green) from Chalex Corp phone 425-391-1169 or
www.vetslides.com $20. This slide has a top
and bottom with a space between that you put the
solution to be counted. It has 2 squares and
each square is divided into six columns. The
column is the same width that you can see in the
eyepiece of the microscope, so you can count up
and down the columns.

Thirty cc syringe
Balance or scale to weigh to .1 grams ($20.00
new on Ebay) or three cc. syringe with end cut
off
Teaspoon/tongue depressor/popsicle stick/spatula
Eyedropper
Salsa dish
Tea strainer
Procedure
1. Fill
syringe to exactly 28 cc with floatation
solution.
2. Add 28 cc of solution to salsa dish
3a. If you have a balance, 2.0 g of feces can
be weighed out directly into tea strainer. It
may be necessary to cut a pellet with a spoon to
get 2.0 grams.
3b. If you do not have a scale, you can
mash fecal pellets into a 3 cc syringe (end cut
off) and form a solid column of feces. Push
plunger to 2 cc mark and cut off excess feces.
Push the 2 cc out into a tea strainer in salsa
dish. Two cc of solid packed feces = 2.0 grams.
4. Use spoon or other tool to crush, mash
and break up feces and form a slurry without
lumps, will take 2-3 minutes.
5. Lift tea strainer out of salsa dish and
discard residue in it.
6. Stir solution in salsa dish 8 times and use
eyedropper to fill one chamber of slide
7. Stir solution in salsa dish 8 times and use
eyedropper to fill other chamber of slide
8. Allow slide to sit 5 minutes.
9. Look at slide under microscope and focus on
air bubbles in sample
10. Move slide on microscope down lane one
and up the next lane looking for eggs-oval
football looking objects (see picture below)

11. Can identify tapeworm eggs and coccidia. We
are most interested in roundworm eggs, so just
count them
12. Count all eggs in 6 lanes on one square (it
may be useful to use a lap counter)
13. Count all eggs in 6 lanes on the other
square and total eggs from both squares
14. Multiply total by 50 to get eggs per gram
Care of McMaster
slide
Wash in
dishwashing detergent and water
Sling out excess water and allow to air dry
Roll in paper towel until next use.
Here are some
links to sites on how to do your own fecal egg
counts
www.luresext.edu/goats/library/fec.html
http://www.scsrpc.org/SCSRPC/Files/Files/RKJMMcMaster.pdf
http://www.jackmauldin.com/fecal_testing_equipt.htm
http://cal.vet.upenn.edu/projects/dxendopar/techniques/mcmasteregg.html
Good pictures of
worm eggs can be found on this web site
http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/resources/documents/Parasitology/EggID/EggID.htm#
Strongyle =
roundworms, includes Barberpole worm, Bankrupt
worm, Brown stomach worm, Black scour worm
Nematodirus = thread-necked intestinal worm
Truchuris = whip worms
Strongyloides = thread worms
Count only
roundworm eggs although you may also see eggs of
thread worms, whip worms, thread-necked worms
and coccidia (see pictures on above referenced
web site). Roundworm eggs look like rounded end
footballs with a yolk and shell. Coccidia look
similar, but are only about ¼ the size of
roundworm eggs. The thread-necked worm egg is
very, very large. The whip worm egg has a polar
plug on each end. Threadworms have what looks
to be a baby worm in it rather than a yolk. It
is difficult to interpret what the number of
coccidia means. Virtually all sheep and goats
will have some coccidia, some more than others.
Yes, about 24 hours after an animal gets
diarrhea from coccidosis, you will see many,
many coccidia when doing a fecal egg count and
coccidia numbers will decrease as the animal
gets well. But in the first 24 hours that the
animal has coccidiosis and diarrhea, there will
often be few coccidia in the feces. Since the
damage to the small intestine is reduced by
early treatment, do not wait until you see a lot
of coccidia in a sample of a goat with diarrhea
to treat them. If you think they have
coccidiosis (history of stress such as disease,
weaning, shipping and have diarrhea), treat them
immediately for coccidiosis. Thread worms are
generally not a problem, but sometimes increase
in animals with high fecal egg counts. They can
be particularly bad in young animals raised in a
stall with wet bedding, because these worms can
directly penetrate the skin. Now you know
another reason for keeping bedding clean. We do
not know how to interpret whip worms either.
They sometimes increase in animals with high
fecal egg counts, but generally do not cause
sickness. Thread-necked worms can be a
significant problem in cool climates. But, we
only count roundworm eggs for our purposes.
Now that you have
a fecal egg count (number of roundworm eggs per
gram), what does it mean? We can decide if it
is high enough that the animal needs to be
dewormed. If it is the warm season of the year
and the Barberpole worm is the dominant species
(ask your vet if in doubt), you need to deworm
dry does and bucks when the fecal egg count
exceeds 2,000 eggs per gram. For lactating
does, yearlings and kids, 1,000 eggs per gram or
more is reason to deworm. Fecal egg counts for
deworming are similar for sheep. If you have
lactating dairy does, those with over 750 eggs
per gram will require deworming. FAMACHA is a
better tool to determine when animals need
dewormed and should be used with fecal egg
counts to determine if deworming is needed. If
it is the cool season time of the year, and the
brown stomach worm or bankrupt worm are the
predominant species, they lay much fewer eggs
than the Barberpole worm and you will need to
think about deworming when fecal egg counts are
half of the above levels. However, one should
also give consideration to fecal consistency
(diarrhea is a major symptom of infection for
non-Barberpole worms) and body condition (has
the goat lost weight or look wormy like?) in
making decisions on the need for deworming.
Consult your local vet, state extension
sheep/goat specialist or parasitologist for
assistance in interpreting fecal egg counts.