Summary Caseous lymphadenitis (CLA) infection was established experimentally in a total of 30, 2‐tooth merino wethers. In the first experiment a broth culture of the causative organism, Corynebacterum pseudotuberculosis was placed directly on to a freshly shorn area on the right shoulder of 21 sheep after pretreatment with a defatting agent, water or 4 different commercial sheep dips. Within 6–13 days focal skin lesions appeared on 7 sheep and these were followed by abscessation of the right prescapular lymph node. Lung lesions of CLA developed in 6 sheep; 5 of which had skin lesions. In the second experiment C. Pseudotuberculosis broth culture was applied over the right shoulder region of 14 sheep, 24 hours post shearing. The 7 animals had only 1 application of the culture and the remaining 7 had 4 applications on consecutive days. A total of 9 of the 14 sheep developed skin lesions and subsequent CLA in the right prescapular lymph nod but there was no significant difference between the 2 methods of application. As part of the second experiment a broth culture of C. pseudotuberculosis was added to a commercial arsenical sheep dip and 2 hours later sprayed on to the right side of sheep shorn 24 hours or 2 weeks previously. Within 6–13 days all 14 sheep treated in this way developed skin lesions from which C. pseudotuberculiosis was recovered in dense pure growth. Healing time of skin lesions in all affected sheep ranged from 17–72 days post inoculation. A serological test to detect the presence of C. pseudotuberculosis antitoxin was used at regular intervals on all experimental sheep. The earliest positive reaction in an affected sheep was recorded 4 weeks post inoculation. In 23 known affected sheep tested at 35 weeks post inoculation, 10 were positive to the Zaki test. No false positive reactors were recorded. The localisation of focal lung lesions in the interstitial tissue suggests that pulmonary abscessation caused by C. pseudotuberculosis develops via the haematogenous route.
In 2 field mortalities studied, sheep died and showed haemorrhage and diffuse liver necrosis after drinking water from dams containing growths of the blue green algae Nodularia. Sheep dosed with water containing N. spumigena Mert 5, 9 and 18 days after collection from one of the farm dams developed pyrexia and leucopenia before death. At necropsy, these sheep showed extensive haemorrhage, accumulations of yellow fluid in body cavitis and acute hepatic necrosis. Guinea pigs dosed with the water 9 days after collection died and developed periacinar liver necrosis, but those dosed 12 days after collection did not.
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