Artículo
Strategic control of the cattle tick Rhipicephlaus microplus applied to rotational and silvopastoral grazing systems in subtropical areas
Nava, Santiago
; Rossner, Maria Victoria
; Toffaletti, Jose R.; Da Luz, Miguel Angel; Rossner, Maria Belen; Signorini Porchietto, Marcelo Lisandro
; Morel, Nicolas



Fecha de publicación:
06/2024
Editorial:
Springer
Revista:
Parasitology Research
ISSN:
0932-0113
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
This work evaluated if strategic control based on no more than three or four annual treatments is useful to control Rhipicephalusmicroplus infestations on cattle when it is applied to intensive rotational grazing and silvopastoral systems withhigh stocking rates in subtropical areas. In the intensive rotational grazing system, three annual treatments with chemicalacaricides were applied on cattle in two different schemes: between spring and early summer and from late winter and latespring. Strategic control based on three treatments with chemical acaricides from late winter to late spring plus an additionalfourth treatment in summer was tested in the silvopastoral system. In the intensive rotational grazing systems, the controlschemes allow to reach a significant reduction in the tick load on cattle considering a time interval from spring to autumn.However, the efficacy levels were not high enough in some specific moments, namely, the tick counts of summer and autumn(there were not significant differences between treated and control groups). The scheme evaluated in the silvopastoral grazingsystem yielded better results than those tested for the intensive rotational system, because significant differences in tickload between treated and control groups were observed in all post-treatment counts and when the analysis was performedfor the whole study period. However, values of efficacy in the count-by-count comparison were disparate, ranging from 64.1to 99.7. Although the efficacy values obtained in the silvopastoral system were better than those of the rotational grazingsystems, the total tick load on treated cattle in autumn was not low enough (mean abundance values 25.14 and 38.14). Tickswere more evenly distributed among hosts in late summer and autumn than in spring or early summer, where few hosts carrymost of the ticks. Some management strategies as intensive rotational systems or silvopastoral structures can lead to a moreefficient forage use, but they imply greater tick challenge than in extensive grazing systems. In these situations, the schemesof strategic control bases on three or four annual treatments should be complemented with additional tactical treatments inlate summer or autumn.
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Articulos (IDICAL)
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACION DE LA CADENA LACTEA
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACION DE LA CADENA LACTEA
Citación
Nava, Santiago; Rossner, Maria Victoria; Toffaletti, Jose R.; Da Luz, Miguel Angel; Rossner, Maria Belen; et al.; Strategic control of the cattle tick Rhipicephlaus microplus applied to rotational and silvopastoral grazing systems in subtropical areas; Springer; Parasitology Research; 123; 6; 6-2024; 1-9
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