Economic Importance Of Parasites

Gbogbo ọrọ náà

A goat that is never once diagnosed with a disease can still quietly cost its owner more than a sick one. A worm burden that never kills anything slows growth, thins milk yield, and scars a hide that would otherwise fetch a premium price, week after week, without a single dramatic symptom to give it away. Parasites are the patient thief of animal production, and the only way to see how much they steal is to put a naira figure on the theft.

In this lesson you will learn to price out what a parasite burden actually costs: the weight gain it takes off an animal, the milk or eggs it removes from output, the dewormers and acaricides a farmer must keep buying to hold it back, and the hide or carcass value it strips away at sale. You will then scale that farm-level arithmetic up to see why parasites are treated as a threat to Nigeria's food security and export earnings, not just to one herd.

Ebumnobi

  1. Explain the economic importance of parasites to animal production
  2. State the losses caused by parasites to farm animals
  3. Explain the effect of parasites on the quality of animal products
  4. Explain the effect of parasites on national food security
  5. Suggest ways of minimising the economic impact of parasites

Akọmọ Ojú-ẹkọ

A sheep farmer near Gusau checks his flock every morning, and every animal is alive and walking. He assumes all is well. What he cannot see, because it produces no dead body and no obvious wound, is that a worm burden has been quietly cutting his lambs' weekly weight gain for two months. Parasites rarely announce their economic cost. A farmer who cannot put a naira figure on that cost will always under-invest in stopping it.

Ayẹwo Ẹkọ

Ekele diri gi maka imecha ihe karịrị na Economic Importance Of Parasites. Ugbu a na ị na-enyochakwa isi echiche na echiche ndị dị mkpa, ọ bụ oge iji nwalee ihe ị ma. Ngwa a na-enye ụdị ajụjụ ọmụmụ dị iche iche emebere iji kwado nghọta gị wee nyere gị aka ịmata otú ị ghọtara ihe ndị a kụziri.

Ị ga-ahụ ngwakọta nke ụdị ajụjụ dị iche iche, gụnyere ajụjụ chọrọ ịhọrọ otu n’ime ọtụtụ azịza, ajụjụ chọrọ mkpirisi azịza, na ajụjụ ede ede. A na-arụpụta ajụjụ ọ bụla nke ọma iji nwalee akụkụ dị iche iche nke ihe ọmụma gị na nkà nke ịtụgharị uche.

Jiri akụkụ a nke nyocha ka ohere iji kụziere ihe ị matara banyere isiokwu ahụ ma chọpụta ebe ọ bụla ị nwere ike ịchọ ọmụmụ ihe ọzọ. Ekwela ka nsogbu ọ bụla ị na-eche ihu mee ka ị daa mba; kama, lee ha anya dị ka ohere maka ịzụlite onwe gị na imeziwanye.

  1. A dewormed group of animals converts feed to weight gain more efficiently than a worm-infested group on the same ration. This is best described as a loss in: A. Product downgrading B. Feed conversion efficiency C. Carcass condemnation D. Fertility Answer: B
  2. A hide scarred by tick and mange damage grades lower and sells for less than an undamaged hide of the same size. This economic effect of parasites is best described as: A. Reduced weight gain B. Product downgrading C. Reduced milk yield D. Treatment cost Answer: B
  3. A flock of 25 sheep gains 3.0 kg per week when healthy but only 1.8 kg per week under a heavy worm burden. If live weight sells at 1,500 naira per kg, what is the naira value of ONE week's weight-gain loss for the whole flock? A. 18,000 naira B. 30,000 naira C. 45,000 naira D. 75,000 naira Answer: C
  4. Which of the following is a recurring economic cost of parasite control, rather than a loss caused directly by the parasite itself? A. Reduced egg output B. Carcass condemnation C. Money spent on dewormers and acaricides D. Hide downgrading Answer: C
  5. In Nigeria, a blood parasite spread by the tsetse fly has made large areas of grazing land in the Middle Belt unsuitable for many cattle breeds. This parasite disease is: A. Coccidiosis B. Trypanosomiasis C. Fascioliasis D. Newcastle disease Answer: B

Àwọn Ìbéèrè Tó Ti Kọjá

Nna, you dey wonder how past questions for this topic be? Here be some questions about Economic Importance Of Parasites from previous years.

Ajụjụ 1 Ripọtì

TEST OF PRACTICAL KNOWLEDGE QUESTION


(a) Stat three ways in which specimen A (Tapeworm) is of economic importance.

(b) State four ways of controlling specimen A

(c) List three nutrients contained in specimen B (Fish meal)

(d) Name two ectoparasites that could infest the farm animal from which specimen C (Hide of cattle) was obtained.

(e) Mention three uses of specimen C