1. Green Veterinary Pharmacology Applied to Parasite Control: Evaluation of Punica granatum, Artemisia campestris, Salix caprea Aqueous Macerates against Gastrointestinal Nematodes of Sheep
- Author
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Domenico Britti, Antonio Bosco, Fabio Castagna, Vincenzo Musella, Ernesto Palma, Carmine Lupia, Laura Rinaldi, Vincenzo Musolino, Cristian Piras, Giuseppe Cringoli, Castagna, F., Piras, C., Palma, E., Musolino, V., Lupia, C., Bosco, A., Rinaldi, L., Cringoli, G., Musella, V., and Britti, D.
- Subjects
Veterinary medicine ,Salix caprea ,sheep ,Artemisia campestri ,Ethnoveterinary medicine ,Gastrointestinal nematode ,Artemisia campestris ,Pharmacology ,Article ,SF600-1100 ,medicine ,anthelmintic efficacy ,Anthelmintic ,Feces ,Punica granatum ,gastrointestinal nematodes ,General Veterinary ,biology ,business.industry ,food and beverages ,biology.organism_classification ,visual_art ,Punica ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,green veterinary pharmacology ,Bark ,Livestock ,business ,ethnoveterinary medicine ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Resistance to anthelmintic drugs in gastrointestinal nematodes (GIN) of sheep is of high concern for livestock production worldwide. In Calabria (southern Italy), many plants have been used in ethnoveterinary medicine for parasite control in small ruminants. Here, we present an in vivo evaluation of anthelmintic efficacy of three plant extracts. The first was based on bark and leaves of Salix caprea, the second and the third were based on the whole plant Artemisia campestris and whole fruit (seeds and peel) of Punica granatum, respectively. Anthelmintic efficacy was evaluated according to the fecal egg count reduction test (FECRT) performed with the FLOTAC technique. The results showed a significant anthelmintic effect of Punica granatum macerate (50%), a low effectiveness of the Artemisia campestris macerate (20%), and a complete ineffectiveness of Salix caprea macerate (0.1%). With these outcomes, we report a P. granatum-based remedy reducing 50% GIN egg output. This result was obtained without using any synthetic drug, paving the way for the employment of green veterinary pharmacology (GVP) as a complementary and sustainable method to reduce the use of chemicals and to counteract anthelmintic resistance.
- Published
- 2021