Fig. 1From: Seasonal epidemiology of gastrointestinal nematodes of cattle in the northern continental climate zone of western Canada as revealed by internal transcribed spacer-2 ribosomal DNA nemabiome barcodingExperimental design for all three farms. Fresh feces containing gastrointestinal nematode eggs were deposited on each pasture for 2–9 days (depending on farm) by the grazing herd. The herd was then relocated, leaving that pasture ungrazed for the remainder of the grazing season. Grass samples adjacent to 24 fecal pats per pasture were collected every 3 weeks after fecal depositionBack to article page