THE ABSENCE OF CLINICAL-DISEASE IN CATTLE IN COMMUNAL GRAZING AREAS WHERE FARMERS ARE CHANGING FROM AN INTENSIVE DIPPING PROGRAM TO ONE OF ENDEMIC STABILITY TO TICK-BORNE DISEASES
Ga. Tice et al., THE ABSENCE OF CLINICAL-DISEASE IN CATTLE IN COMMUNAL GRAZING AREAS WHERE FARMERS ARE CHANGING FROM AN INTENSIVE DIPPING PROGRAM TO ONE OF ENDEMIC STABILITY TO TICK-BORNE DISEASES, Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research, 65(3), 1998, pp. 169-175
A two-year field study was conducted in four communal grazing areas in
South Africa. Sera were collected from young cattle (6-18 months old)
in these areas during the winters of 1991 to 1993. The sera were test
ed for antibodies to Babesia bovis, Babesia bigemina, Anaplasma margin
ale and Cowdria ruminantium. In two of the four areas, treatment with
acaricide was erratic and dependent on the discretion of individual ow
ners, in these areas the drought of 1992 had a major impact on tick bu
rdens and there were changes in the seroprevalence to tick-borne disea
ses. In the other two areas there was a reduction in the intensity of
acaricide application and this was associated with an increase in sero
positivity to the tick-borne diseases. Increases in the prevalence of
seropositivity and the presence of endemic instability, as calculated
from inoculation rates, were not accompanied by outbreaks of clinical
disease. Possible reasons for this are discussed.