Florida faces a critical challenge in wetland management as invasive species threaten ecosystem integrity across the state. The South Florida Water Management District identifies approximately 200 introduced plant and animal species established in the region, with 66 non-native plant species designated as priorities for control. Current management strategies rely heavily on mechanical removal, prescribed burns, and herbicide applications—methods that are expensive, labor-intensive, and may have unintended ecological consequences.
Simultaneously, livestock grazing in wetland environments remains controversial and understudied, particularly in subtropical climates. While extensive research documents livestock impacts on wetlands, the vast majority focuses on cattle in temperate regions. Research on sheep grazing in subtropical wetlands, specifically using parasite-resistant hair sheep breeds, remains critically limited.

1579 Walsh Street Oviedo,
Florida 32765

© 2025 Black Hammock Family Farm.
All rights reserved.
Katahdin sheep represent a unique opportunity for Florida wetland management due to their specific biological adaptations:
Parasite Resistance: Research demonstrates that Katahdin sheep possess significantly higher parasite resistance than conventional wool breeds. Studies conducted at Virginia Tech and Arkansas showed Katahdin sheep had fecal egg counts 45% lower than Dorper crosses and required substantially less anthelmintic treatment than wool breeds. Their Caribbean hair sheep ancestry provides genetic resistance evolved in hot, humid, high-parasite environments—precisely the conditions present in Florida wetlands.
Climate Adaptation: Katahdin sheep demonstrate well-developed heat tolerance in tropical and subtropical regions. Their hair coat (rather than wool) allows superior thermoregulation in humid conditions where wool breeds experience heat stress. University of Florida research identifies Katahdin as one of six meat breeds demonstrating ability to naturally minimize parasite burdens in Florida conditions.
Selective Grazing Behavior: Sheep exhibit different grazing patterns than cattle. Research indicates sheep nibble grass close to the ground and selectively consume flowers and certain vegetation types. This selective grazing could target specific invasive plant species while minimizing impact on desired native vegetation.
Reduced Wetland Impact: Sheep are lighter and more agile than cattle, causing less soil compaction and trampling damage. Studies in New Zealand and British Columbia specifically noted that sheep grazing can be preferable to cattle in fragile wetland environments vulnerable to poaching (soil damage from hoofprints in wet conditions).
Vegetation Management Without Chemicals: Multiple studies demonstrate that moderate grazing intensity can increase plant species diversity and control dominant invasive species that exclude less competitive native plants. Research in California vernal pools showed that reintroduced grazing at moderate stocking rates significantly increased both diversity and native cover after just two years. European wetland studies found that patchy, occasionally intense grazing increased protected plant species and habitat heterogeneity while benefiting both conservation and agricultural goals.
Cost-Effective Management: The solar grazing industry demonstrates that sheep can provide effective, economical vegetation management. While mechanical mowing requires expensive equipment, fuel, and risks panel/infrastructure damage, sheep provide continuous low-cost maintenance while generating potential revenue through meat production.
Ecosystem Services: Properly managed grazing can create habitat heterogeneity that benefits wildlife. Research in Hungarian marshes showed increases in wetland bird populations, protected plant species, and patches of open vegetation with grazing intensity gradients. The key is avoiding continuous heavy grazing while allowing patchy, varied grazing pressure.
Carbon Footprint Reduction: Replacing mechanical vegetation management eliminates fossil fuel consumption for mowers while integrating livestock production into ecosystem restoration.
Hypothesis: Katahdin sheep grazing at moderate stocking densities (2-4 sheep/acre for 2-4 week periods) will significantly reduce biomass of target invasive species compared to ungrazed control areas, while maintaining or increasing native plant species diversity.
Hypothesis: Moderate-intensity sheep grazing will maintain water quality parameters (turbidity, nitrogen, phosphorus, fecal coliform bacteria) within acceptable ranges for wetland ecosystem health, with impacts significantly lower than documented cattle grazing effects.
Hypothesis: Katahdin sheep grazing on Florida wetland vegetation will maintain adequate body condition scores and parasite resistance within acceptable management thresholds, requiring no more than 15% of animals to need anthelmintic treatment during the grazing period.
Hypothesis: Sheep grazing vegetation management costs will be ≤50% of equivalent mechanical mowing and herbicide application costs over a 12-month period, while producing marketable lamb weight gain.
Hypothesis: Sheep grazing vegetation management costs will be ≤50% of equivalent mechanical mowing and herbicide application costs over a 12-month period, while producing marketable lamb weight gain.
All sheep management will follow American Veterinary Medical Association guidelines
Monitoring protocols ensure early detection of heat stress or health issues
Access to shade, clean water, and supplemental minerals as needed
Immediate veterinary intervention protocols established
Grazing exclusion during critical wildlife breeding/nesting periods
Monitoring for any decline in threatened or endangered species
Adaptive management to respond to unintended impacts
Coordination with Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
Results may be specific to Black Hammock Farm's wetland types and may not generalize to all Florida wetlands
Seasonal variation requires multi-year data collection for robust conclusions
Initial infrastructure investment may limit adoption by other landowners
Weather variability in Florida may affect consistency of grazing schedules

A lamb born on a well-managed farm may never receive its first protection from a needle.
Its immunity arrives in a different form entirely — thick, golden, and warm — produced by its mother in the first hours after birth. If the lamb nurses in time, it absorbs something remarkable: a concentrated package of maternal antibodies, built through months of careful preparation, ready to defend a body that has never encountered the world before.
That's the science of colostrum. And this Saturday at Black Hammock Farm, students will learn exactly how it works — and why what happens in those first few hours after birth determines whether a lamb thrives or doesn't survive its first week.
Of all the vaccines available for sheep, only one is universally recommended for every flock, everywhere: CDT.
CDT is a three-way vaccine that protects against two clostridial diseases and tetanus — all caused by bacteria that are already present in the environment. In soil. In feces. In the gut of healthy animals right now. Under normal conditions, these bacteria cause no harm. But under the right circumstances — a dietary shift, a wound, a sudden energy influx — they multiply explosively and produce fatal toxins with almost no warning.
Here's what CDT protects against:
C — Clostridium perfringens Type C: Causes hemorrhagic enteritis (bloody scours) in nursing lambs during their first weeks of life. Triggered by sudden feed changes or excess milk intake.
D — Clostridium perfringens Type D: Known as "overeating disease" or pulpy kidney. Affects lambs over one month old, often triggered by high-concentrate feeding.
T — Clostridium tetani: Tetanus, or lockjaw. Risk peaks at docking, castration, and disbudding — any procedure that creates an open wound. Can strike before any visible symptoms appear.
This is why lamb vaccination science is taught at CommunOT Farm & Programming farm labs — because understanding disease prevention in living systems is exactly the kind of real-world biology that makes learning stick.
Here's the insight that changes how you think about lamb health management entirely: the most effective way to protect a newborn lamb is to vaccinate its mother before birth.
When a vaccinated ewe's immune system produces antibodies to CDT, those antibodies become concentrated in her colostrum — the thick first milk produced in the hours immediately following birth. When a newborn lamb nurses within that critical first-hour window, it absorbs those maternal antibodies directly through its gut wall. This passive immunity protects the lamb for its first six to eight weeks of life, covering the period when it is most vulnerable to Type C enteritis.
This is why ewe vaccination timing is one of the most important management decisions on a sheep farm. A lamb born to an unvaccinated or poorly vaccinated ewe enters the world without that protection already in place.
Visit communotfarm.com to learn more about how CommunOT uses real agricultural science like this to build meaningful learning experiences for children.
Knowing what to vaccinate against is only half the picture. Knowing when is what determines whether it works.

First-time mothers (primiparous ewes) require a two-dose primary series in late pregnancy, given four weeks apart. Their immune systems have not previously been primed, and a single dose won't generate sufficient antibody concentration in colostrum to reliably protect their lambs.
This is colostrum immunity and lamb vaccination science made tangible — and it's exactly what students explore during the Black Hammock Farm farm lab.
How a vaccine is given matters just as much as what it contains. CDT and most clostridial vaccines are administered subcutaneously (SQ) — under the skin, not into the muscle. Using the wrong route reduces effectiveness and can cause unnecessary tissue damage.
The needle is inserted under the skin at the base of a "tent" of skin pinched up from the body. Slower absorption, but less tissue damage. Always confirm the route on the vaccine label.
The needle is inserted into muscle tissue, typically the neck or hindquarter. Faster absorption but higher risk of injection-site reactions and carcass blemishes. Never use IM for CDT unless the label specifically permits it.
A few other essentials for safe vaccine administration:
Needle selection: Use 18- or 20-gauge needles. Change needles frequently — ideally one fresh needle per animal.
Injection site: For market or show animals, the axilla (armpit area) avoids visible blemishes on commercially relevant tissue.
Storage: Refrigerated, protected from light and temperature extremes. Never use expired, frozen, or heat-damaged vaccines.
Record keeping: Document every administration — what was given, dosage, lot number, expiration date, and date administered.
CDT is universal — but some flocks need more depending on regional disease pressure and flock history. These are never standard recommendations; they require veterinary guidance and knowledge of your specific situation.
Soremouth (Orf): A live vaccine for a viral skin disease affecting mouth and feet. Important: orf is a zoonotic disease that can spread from sheep to humans. Wear gloves.
E. coli Scours: A pre-breeding ewe vaccine that transfers immunity through colostrum, or an oral antibody product given directly to high-risk newborns at birth.
Abortion Vaccines (Vibrio / Chlamydia): Administered before breeding. Ewe lambs require a three-dose series for full protection in their first breeding season.
Foot Rot (FootVax): Best administered before the wet season — late winter to early spring in Florida.
8-Way Clostridial (Covexin-8): Expands coverage to include blackleg. For most Florida flocks, CDT alone is sufficient.
Learn more about how CommunOT Farm & Programming connects this kind of agricultural science to real learning outcomes for children in Central Florida.
There's something else happening when a student traces the path from a ewe's vaccination to a lamb's immunity at birth. They're not just learning biology. They're practicing systems thinking — tracing a decision to an outcome across time, through a living system they can see and touch.
For children with developmental differences, this kind of sequential reasoning — if this happens now, then that happens later — supports executive function development, cause-and-effect comprehension, and scientific literacy. It also builds on themes of care, protection, and interdependence that are central to OT-informed social-emotional learning.
That's the quiet power behind every activity CommunOT Farm & Programming designs: the science and the therapy are the same experience.
This Saturday, March 14th, students will explore lamb vaccination science and colostrum immunity firsthand — at Black Hammock Farm in Oviedo, guided by occupational therapists and a working farm family during the height of lambing season.
Event Details:
Date: Saturday, March 14, 2026
Time: 10:00 – 11:30 AM
Location: Black Hammock Farm, Oviedo, FL
Cost: $30 per student
Ages: 2–18 · All learners welcome
👉 Reserve your spot at communotfarm.com
A lamb's protection begins before it's even born — with a decision its mother's shepherd made weeks earlier. That's not just good farming. That's a science lesson worth showing up for.
CommunOT Farm & Programming is a pediatric occupational therapy organization based in Seminole County, FL, dedicated to integrating sensory-rich, nature-based experiences into developmental programming for children ages 2–18. Register and learn more at communotfarm.com.

1579 Walsh Street Oviedo,
Florida 32765

© 2025 Black Hammock Family Farm. All rights reserved.