The mucosal mast cell and eosinophil responses of goats and sheep to a mixed gastrointestinal nematode infection were compared. Groups of eight does and nine ewes, previously maintained on pasture and treated with anthelmintic when they were housed and five worm-free lambs were challenged with 10,000 Trichostrongylus vitrinus third stage larvae (L3) and 10,000 Teladorsagia circumcincta L3. Eleven days after challenge, the ewes had significantly (P < 0.001) lower burdens of abomasal and intestinal worms than the does or naive lambs, but significantly higher (P < 0.001) tissue concentrations of mast cell proteinase. Toluidine blue-stained sections indicated a paucity of mast cells in the does compared with the ewes, whereas the immunolocalisation of sheep mast cell proteinase revealed similar numbers of stained cells in the two species. This discrepancy was due to the relatively high proportion of globule leucocytes (77 and 91 per cent in the jejunum and abomasum, respectively) in the does compared with the ewes (7 and 24 per cent in the jejunum and abomasum, respectively). No differences were detected between the numbers of circulating or tissue eosinophils in the ewes and does.