Final Update – Sustainable anthelmintic use
Key results
- Dosing all lambs to the heaviest animal is the least cost-effective method.
- Splitting lambs into three weight groups reduced wormer use by 22–24%, saving £200–£240 across the 2025 season.
- Using an auto-change dosing gun saved an additional 8–9% (around £85–£89) compared to the three-group method.
- Weigh accuracy is critical—incorrect weights can lead to under dosing and resistance risk.
- Auto-change guns offer labour efficiency but require higher investment and ongoing maintenance.
Background
SCOPS guidelines recommend treating sheep to the weight of the heaviest animal in a group to avoid underdosing and slowing resistance development. However, large weight variation—especially before weaning—can lead to significant overdosing and unnecessary cost. Tan Y Graig trialled alternative dosing strategies in 2025 to determine practical and economic benefits to their system.
Purpose of the work
- Whilst the initial purpose of the project was to implement a Targeted Selective Treatment (TST) strategy, the project changed its course to compare three approaches to wormer administration:
1.Dosing the heaviest lamb in the group
2.Splitting animals into three weight-based subgroups
3.Using an auto-change dosing gun
- To quantify cost differences and identify practical benefits and limitations of each method.
- To support improved anthelmintic utilisation while reducing unnecessary medicine use and cost.
What we did
- Checked accuracy of weigh scales using calibrated weights.
- Weighed all lambs throughout the season (May–Nov 2025) to capture variation in liveweight.
- Compared wormer costs using real price data from veterinary suppliers.
- Calculated wormer usage and cost under:
- Blanket dosing the heaviest
- Three weight sub groups
- Auto-change dosing gun delivering individual liveweight doses
- Documented labour, equipment and software requirements for each approach.
Outcomes
- Three subgroup dosing delivered the greatest cost savings relative to investment—accurate, low-tech, and accessible for most systems.
- Auto-change dosing gun improved accuracy and speed but required:
- Approximate £895+VAT upfront cost
- Regular calibration, servicing and software compatibility
- Reliable weigh scale accuracy
- Auto change technology would take 4–5 years to pay back at Tan Y Graig based on wormer savings alone.
- Full group dosing risked substantial overdosing due to wide weight variation (up to 20kg differences at some sessions).
How to apply on your farm
- Weigh animals regularly and ensure scales are checked for accuracy at the start, middle and end of each session.
- Split lambs into at least three weight groups post weaning to improve dosing accuracy and grazing management.
- Dose each group to the heaviest animal within that sub group, not the whole flock.
- Consider auto-change dosing guns if saving labour/time is a priority and the flock size justifies the investment.
- Record weights and treatments electronically (EID + software) to monitor DLWG and refine management decisions.
Please contact timtechnegolcff@mentera.cymru if you would like to receive a copy of the full report.