Ranchers, Regulators Weary from Cattle Fever Tick War
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Ranchers, Regulators Weary from Cattle Fever Tick War
Source: www.cattlenetwork.com
Texas
animal health officials have cast another wide net in the battle to
eradicate cattle fever ticks in South Texas. The Texas Animal Health
Commission (TAHC) has temporarily quarantined 152,716 acres in Starr
and Hidalgo counties. In nearby Zapata County, five-mile quarantine
perimeters are being drawn around fever-tick infested pastures. A
foreign pest, the cattle fever tick has the capability to carry and
transmit Babesia, a blood parasite that can kill adult cattle.
Although it prefers cattle, the fever tick can survive and be carried
on horses, deer, elk, aoudad sheep and a number of other deer species.
Since
October 2008, (the beginning of the 2009 federal fiscal year) 127 fever
tick-infested premises in eight South Texas counties have been detected
and quarantined. Of these, 68 premises are in Zapata County, 51 are in
Starr County, and the remainder are scattered among Maverick, Brooks,
Cameron, Kinney, Dimmit and Webb counties. This year’s infested
premises tally will eclipse last year’s count of 132, and could meet or
beat the record set during the 1973 fever tick outbreak -- 170 infested
premises.
“The Starr-Hidalgo temporary quarantine is the
fifth since July 2007 and was implemented less than 70 days after we
released nearly 375,000 acres from temporary quarantine in Webb, Dimmit
and Maverick counties,” said Dr. Hillman. “We had very good results in
Webb, Dimmit and Maverick Counties, where the tick-infested premises
count has dropped to five. About 250,000 acres remain under temporary
quarantine in the three counties.
“In rural Zapata County,
there are no appropriate roads or easily identified boundaries for
establishing a temporary quarantine. Therefore, to accomplish adequate
tick surveillance in Zapata County, premises within five miles of an
infested pasture are being temporarily quarantined.” Dr. Hillman
explained that ranchers in the temporary quarantines can move livestock
after the animals undergo a clean tick inspection and treatment by the
USDA Tick Force or TAHC.
Dr. Hillman explained that Tick
Force and TAHC teams work inward from the outer edges of the
temporarily quarantined area, inspecting ranches with cattle, horses
and wildlife hosts to determine the outermost spread of the fever tick
infestation. Not only do animals become tick-infested, but so do the
pastures, as fever ticks may wait in the grass for months, before
finding a suitable onto a host animal.” said Dr. Hillman.
“When
infested premises are detected, the animals and pasture are quarantined
for nine months or longer, and a variety of tick eradication measures
are taken. Cattle are inspected and run through dipping vats spray
boxes charged with the pesticide CO-RAL. Another treatment being
evaluated in field trials is injectable doramectin. Horses are
sprayed, and wildlife are provided medicated feed or enticed to
treatment stations where their ears and neck rub against
pyrethrin-coated posts while they eat.
Alternatively, once
cattle are ‘tick-free,’ the cattle may be moved to a new site, allowing
the pasture to be ‘vacated’ for months, causing the ticks will starve.
Greater success is achieved, however, by leaving cattle in place and
continuing to inspect and treat the animals every 14 days with CO-RAL
or every 25 to 28 days with doramectin. Ticks picked up from the grass
by the cattle and destroyed by treatment, eventually leaves the pasture
free of the pest. This long and costly process is a burden to the
ranchers who must hire helicopters and cowboys time after time to round
up the cattle from the thick brush,” said Dr. Hillman.
“With
each new infested premises, costs rise for the fever tick programmore
equipment, more personnel, more products and more time. Sadly, because
we have worked so hard to keep this outbreak contained to South Texas,
it is not fully recognized as a national animal health issue, with
potential international consequences,” said Dr. Hillman, Texas’ state
veterinarian and head of the TAHC, the state’s livestock and poultry
health regulatory agency. “The longer it takes to eradicate this fever
tick incursion, the greater are the chances fever ticks will be spread
to other states, which will raise the costs exponentially. More
people, more national resources and new tick-fighting products are
needed now to get this potentially deadly pest out of the U.S.”
Dr.
Hillman said the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)
is helping ranchers with land management techniques to help reduce
cattle fever ticks, including, but not limited to, cross-fencing, brush
management, prescribed burning and prescribed grazing to help with
livestock handling, to destroy cattle fever tick habitat, and to help
manage wildlife.
For the 2010-2011 biennium, the Texas
Legislature appropriated an additional $500,000 a year in state funds
for the fever tick program. The TAHC will some of the funds to hire
five new fever tick personnel. “The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s
Tick Force has received some funding to hire temporary and term
workers, but sustainable, ongoing funding of about $15 million per year
is needed to support this program, eradicate the current outbreak and
prevent future problems. I urge industry and lawmakers to support
fever tick eradication while it is still a brush fire confined to South
Texas. The situation with this foreign pest could become a wildfire,
particularly if ticks begin transmitting Babesia, and we have cattle deaths. We don’t need a replay of the 1800s, when thousands of cattle died from tick fever,” he said.
Although
the fever tick was declared eradicated from the U.S. in 1943, it has
never been wiped out in Mexico, which serves as a continuous source for
tick reinfestation in Texas. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Tick
Force has fewer than 60 riders to patrol the 900 miles of the Rio
Grande on horseback from Del Rio to Brownsville, and apprehend ‘ticky’
Mexican cattle, horses, deer, elk and susceptible species that cross
the river. Detecting ticks in this narrow permanent fever tick buffer
zone is expected, due to the prevalence of the tick in Mexico,
explained Dr. Hillman. “Finding them farther inland indicates that our
defenses are inadequate and that wandering wildlife or stray or
smuggled livestock are spreading the foreign ticks. Today, 60 percent
of the fever tick infestations are encroaching deeper into the ‘free’
areas of the state,” said Dr. Hillman.
The boundary of the
new temporary quarantined area in Starr and Hidalgo counties begins at
the intersection of Military and Garza Roads in La Joya, in Hidalgo
County. It follows Garza northward to the intersection with US Highway
83, where it follows the highway to the intersection with Jara Chinas
Road. The boundary continues north on Jaras Chinas until it turns
northwest on 14 Mile road, then north on Salazar Road to the
intersection with FM 490. The boundary follows FM 490 northwest,
crossing the county line into Starr County and continuing to the
intersection with the fence line of El Junco Ranch. At this point, the
boundary turns south, following the ranch fence line to Las Brisas
Road/Pimienta Road, where it continues south to U.S. Highway 83. The
boundary follows Highway 83 southeast, where it follows Montalvo Road,
then Military Road to the intersection with Garza, the starting point
of the zone. A map of the temporary quarantine zone is posted on the
TAHC web site at http://www.tahc.state.tx.us or a copy is available by mail or email by calling the TAHC at 800-550-8242, ext. 710.

