Posted on 05/31/2014 2:01:07 PM PDT by nickcarraway
When Australian farmer Tony Knight first saw a purple-flowering plant growing across the bushfire-scarred terrain where his sheep grazed, his first thought was that it looked like good stock feed.
However, the pleasant-looking plant was far from the nutritious food his livestock needed after their paddocks were razed bare by the fires that swept through the northwest region of New South Wales state last year.
Instead, the native weed known as the Darling pea contained a toxin that affected the sheeps nervous systems, killing hundreds by triggering mental and physical deterioration.
To start with, they will do quite well when they first get on to it and their condition will pick up, Knight said at his farm near the town of Coonabarabran.
But once it gets them addicted, its just a drug it goes from becoming their best friend to their worst enemy, he said.
Knight said he had lost almost 100 merino sheep out of an 800-strong flock to the noxious pea in recent months, while his sister-in-law, Louise, who lives on the farm next door, said 800 of her sheep from a total of 14,000 had died after eating the plant.
A confluence of events enabled the outbreak, with the weed growing in an area where bushfires had wiped out its competition. The destruction of fences during the bushfires, which devastated 54,000 hectares of land, meant it was difficult to rotate the livestock on to non-affected fields as the animals roamed the mountainous terrain, chewing the weed as they went. Australias sheep flock is estimated at 74 million, with about 79 percent of them Merino, bred for their high-quality wool, which is used in top-of-the-range clothing.
Australia is the worlds leading wool producer and exporter, accounting for 24 percent of global production, with annual exports valued at more than A$3 billion (US$2.79 billion). China is its biggest customer.
Knight, whose family has lived on the land beside Warrumbungle National Park for generations, said the affected sheep were easy to spot.
You will see them in a paddock usually they are on their own, Knight said. They do a lot of stargazing. They do a lot of trotting around with their heads in the air. The dogs get very confused because [the sheep] dont behave like they should, he said. As the sheep become more affected by the toxin, they lose control of their hind legs. They didnt know which planet they were on. They were all spaced out, Knight said of several sheep he had to load on a truck during the shearing season as they could not walk. The Darling pea is mostly perennial, which means it has a life cycle of more than two years. While the weed regularly occurs in small amounts, rain on pastures stripped of their usual covering by droughts or bushfires can encourage it to sprout from its root stocks and infest the area, said Brian Sindel, an expert in weed science at Australias University of New England.
Such infestations, which can also affect cows, are uncommon and might occur once every five to 10 years in Australia, usually affecting a small number of livestock. While some sheep can recover from a short period of grazing the pea, those that are too exposed suffer irreversible degenerative changes to their central nervous system. Often weeds are the first species that come back after a bushfire as they have higher seed-bank levels. They have more seeds in a dormant state that are awoken, Sindel said. With little other feed available, the livestock are more likely to consume large quantities of the weed, which is of course poisonous, containing the alkaloid swainsonine.
Some animals appear to develop a liking for the plants and actively select them from the feed available, Sindel said.
Veterinarian Greg McCann said the toxin attack an enzyme involved in metabolism in the brains of affected animals.
They lose the ability to judge where their feet are. They become wonky, fall over, appear to be blind, walking into things, McCann told rural paper the Land.
They can assume funny postures, like head bent down or head bent back, but the one thing that was seen in the cases associated in the Coonabarabran area were twitching, he said.
The growth of the weed under trees in bushland over large areas of undulating terrain also made it impractical or uneconomic to try eradicating them, Sindel said.
Using weed killers or pestcides to manage the problem is complicated with the pea a native plant and some varieties of it endangered. Permission may be needed from the New South Wales state government under its Native Vegetation Act. Similar acts are also in force elsewhere across Australia. Knight said so far there appeared to be one solution to weed out most of the pea by getting the sheep to eat them.
Its ironic, but it seems that the best way to control it is with livestock, he said.
Its a perennial plant and if something eats it, it will shoot again. As it shoots, if there is something there to eat those shoots, it wont take long before they kill a plant, he said.
Weed kills.
Yep
Goats would be smart enough to *not* eat it.
Surely a few months hard time will straighten these low life animals out. Think of the poor baby sheep. The thought is just baaaaaaaad.
I’ll see myself out.
Sheep need to be protected. Can’t find their own way home and will eat toxic stuff. (P) That’s why we need the Good Shepherd...
A goat ate a full pack of Camel filters I left on some blocks while I climbed up to help put a roof on a garage. Tobacco, filters, package, foil, ... everything. I freaked out and told the guy who owned the goat, thinking I might have killed it for him. He just laughed and said "sorry about your cigarettes but they won't hurt my goat. He'll eat anything."
Now that I think about it I should have charged him for worming his goat! ;^)
Dear Americans Darling Peas
Will get you high.
Come and get them.
Sheep are always just looking for a place to die. Not very hardy creatures.
Sheep are the most psychologically and environmentally fragile domesticated animal... and the most completely, absolutely stunningly so, stupid too.
This agrees with my experience as an employee on a cow/sheep ranch. Sheep falls over and, instead of getting up, just lays there to die. Good to eat, though.
It’s an endangered plant!
http://nct.org.au/nature-conservation/wildlife/native-plants/slender-darling-pea.html
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