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Research Project: BIOLOGY AND CONTROL OF TICKS OF VETERINARY AND HUMAN IMPORTANCE

Location: Tick and Biting Fly Research

Title: Evaluation of a passive self-treatment technology for pastured cattle with a doramectin-medicated molasses-based liquid feed supplement for the control of southern cattle ticks

Authors

Submitted to: Livestock Insect Worker's Conference Annual Meeting
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: May 4, 2012
Publication Date: N/A

Technical Abstract: The treatment of cattle every 14 days for the eradication of cattle fever ticks carries a high financial burden for producers. Thus, most producers who have ticks detected on their property hoose to vacate the premises of all livestock instead of dipping animals every 14 days. However, the vacation option has failed to eliminate ticks on numerous occasions because of the involvement of white-tailed deer. Thus, there is a critical need to identify and develop strategies that reduce the need for frequent gathering of animals, while still achieveing eradication as a goal. A 31-Week study was conducted to evaluate whether a molasses-based liquid feed supplement medicated with doramectin would substantially reduce the number of required treatments while eradicating ticks from the pasture.Results showed that no countable ticks were obtained from treated animals after the 11th week of the study, indicating that the doramectin treatment was highly effective in preventing ticks from reaching repletion. Likewise, results showed that the concentration of doramectin in the serum of treated animals remained above 8.4 ppb for the entire study, thereby confirming that the treatment would prevent ticks from reaching repletion and sustaining the field population. Therefore, this study strongly indicated the use of this technology has great potential as a “stand alone” treatment method for eradication of a field population of cattle fever ticks.

   

 
Project Team
Pound, Joe - Mat
Lohmeyer, Kimberly
Li, Andrew
Miller, Robert
Olafson, Pia
Perez De Leon, Adalberto - Beto
Goolsby, John
Thomas, Donald
Osbrink, Weste
Showler, Allan
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Animal Health (103)
  Veterinary, Medical and Urban Entomology (104)
 
Related Projects
   PROPRIETARY WHITE-TAILED DEER COLLAR ASSEMBLY
   SERUM CONCENTRATION OF IVERMECTIN IN PASTURED CATTLE PROVIDED FREE-ACCESS TO AN IVERMECTIN-MEDICATED PROTEIN OR MINERAL BLOCK SUPPLEMENT
   NATIVE RANGE COLLECTION AND EVALUATION OF CANDIDATE BIOLOGICAL CONTROL AGENTS FOR ARUNDO DONAX
   DEVELOPMENT OF MASS REARING METHODS FOR THE BIOLOGICAL CONTROL AGENT OF ARUNDO DONAX, RHIZASPIDIOTUS DONACIS, THE ARUNDO SCALE
   KERR WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT AREA - CONTROL OF TICKS FEEDING ON WHITE-TAILED DEER
   ASSESSMENT OF FECAL CHEMISTRY CHANGES IN FEVER TICK INFESTED CATTLE USING NEAR INFRARED REFLECTANCE SPECTROSCOPY
   ROTUNDA DOOR CONTROL SYSTEM
   ASSESSMENT OF THE LARVAL TARSAL TEST AND SEARCH FOR SINGLE NUCLEOTIDE MUTATIONS IN PYRETHROID-RESISTANT RHIPICEPHALUS MICROPLUS
   EVALUATION OF NOVEL ACARICIDE FOR CONTROLLING CATTLE FEVER TICKS, RHIPICEPHALUS (BOOPHILUS) MICROPLUS AND R(B) ANNULATUS, AND LONE STAR TICK
   USE OF CANINE TO DETECT AND ALERT TO THE PRESENCE OF CATTLE INFESTED WITH CATTLE FEVER TICKS, RHIPICEPHALUS (B.) ANNULATUS AND MICROPLUS
 
 
Last Modified: 06/18/2013
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