Abstract :
The FAMACHA© system is a practical on-farm method, which can be used to identify small
ruminants in need of anthelmintic treatment, depending on the colour of the lower eyelid
mucous membrane, which reflects level of anaemia. In the present study, we evaluated the
accuracy of the FAMACHA© system, for detecting severity of anaemia and trichostrongylid
gastrointestinal parasitism in dairy sheep and goats in Greece. The study was carried out in
18 sheep flocks and 12 goat herds, with animals of the dairy breed type, managed in a semiintensive
system. Initially, all female animals in each flock/herd were clinically examined
and assigned one of the five scores available in the FAMACHA© system eye colour chart (‘1’
to ‘5’). Subsequently, 6 animals from those assigned each of the scores in each flock/herd,
i.e., 30 sheep/goats per flock/herd, were selected at random for sample collection. That way,
in total, 540 sheep and 360 goats, were sampled. From each of the above animals, a blood
sample was collected for haematological examination; a faecal sample was collected for
faecal egg counting and evaluation of proportion of 3rd stage trichostrongylid larvae. There
was a significant positive correlation of haematocrit value of animals and score assignment
in the FAMACHA© system. Faecal egg counts and proportion of Haemonchus contortus 3rd
stage larvae in faecal samples of animals assigned score ‘1’ or ‘5’ were significantly different
(P < 0.05) between them. For animals assigned scores ‘2’, ‘3’ and ‘4’, no correlation
was evident in score assigned and faecal egg counts or proportion of 3rd stage larvae of H.
contortus in faecal samples. Finally, no significant association was evident between haematocrit
values and faecal egg counts. The most frequently identified nematode helminth
genus in coprocultures was Teladorsagia spp., which in some farms exceeded 80% of total
nematode larvae. It is concluded that in Greece, where prevalence of H. contortus is low, the
FAMACHA© system may not be useful for identification of animals requiring anthelmintic
treatment. In this case, classical parasitological techniques or other selection criteria would
be more appropriate