Articles: Press Release
Good News, Bad News for Cattle Fever Tick Eradication Effort
Contact:
Texas Animal Health Commission
Box l2966 * Austin, Texas 78711 * (800) 550-8242 * FAX (512) 719-0719
Bob Hillman, DVM * Executive Director
For info, contact Carla Everett, information officer, at 1-800-550-8242,
ext. 710, or ceverett@tahc.state.tx.us
The Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC) has released from temporary
preventive quarantine more than 375,000 acres in Maverick, Dimmit and Webb
counties. The preventive quarantine had been imposed on the three counties
more than a year ago to prevent the spread of dangerous cattle fever ticks.
Further south in Zapata and Starr counties, however, more fever
tick-infested ranches are being detected at a disturbing rate, and concerns
remain for sustainable fever tick program funding, fever tick surveillance
and the approval of new products for treating fever tick hosts.
Cattle fever ticks are capable of carrying and transmitting babesia, a blood
parasite deadly to cattle. Although the ticks were eradicated from the
U.S. in 1943, the vigilance against the pest cannot end, due to its
existence in Mexico. A permanent fever tick quarantine line a few hundred
yards to five miles wide runs along the U.S. border through eight south
Texas counties, and is patrolled on horseback by the USDAs Tick Force to
protect against stray ticky livestock and wildlife crossing the Rio Grande.
Livestock moved from the permanent quarantine zone must be individually
inspected by USDA or TAHC inspectors, treated and permitted to leave the
zone. More problematic, however, is wildlife movement. Deer, elk, nilgai
and other species of captive or free-ranging wildlife can play host to the
tick, moving it from pasture to pasture. Regardless if they are moved by
inappropriate livestock movement or wildlife, sporadic cattle fever tick
incursions occur, requiring producers and state and federal animal health
agencies to take aggressive actions, such as temporary preventive
quarantines, to prevent the spread of the potentially deadly pest. In 1973,
the largest outbreak occurred, with 170 tick-infested premises detected in
Texas. Last federal fiscal year (October 1, 2007-September 30, 2008) came
in second, with 132 infested premises found. In the first seven months of FY
2009, 89 fever tick-infested premises already have been detected, and if the
rate continues, this could be the worst year for fever ticks since
eradication was achieved in 1943.
The release of 375,000 acres in the temporary preventive quarantine area
means that livestock on 255 premises in Maverick, Dimmit and Webb counties
can now be moved without restrictions, although everyone in south Texas must
remain vigilant for this foreign livestock pest. The temporary quarantine
in these counties had been imposed since August 2007 and was adjusted in
April 2008, said Dr. Bob Hillman, executive director of the TAHC, the states
livestock and poultry health regulatory agency. The temporary preventive
quarantine will remain in effect for 247,388 acres, encompassing 28 ranches.
Since October 1, two tick-infested premises have been detected in Maverick
County and one in Webb County, both of which are in the permanent quarantine
zone. Another tick-infested premises was detected in Dimmit County and
remains under quarantine. Infested, exposed and adjacent premises remain
under movement restrictions and treatment requirements until repeated
inspections indicate the livestock and premises are fever tick-free.
Released from the temporary preventive quarantine is the northwest end of
the area that included the city of Eagle Pass. On the southern edge, all
Webb County locations that were in the temporary preventive quarantine area
have been released. The eastern edge of the preventive quarantine now
meanders south and southwest along ranch fence lines from near the
intersection of County Road 1936 and Highway 277 to Mines Road (FM 1021)
just inside Dimmit County. The western edge butts up against the permanent
fever tick quarantine line. (A map of the released and currently quarantined
area is available on the TAHC website at http://www.tahc.state.tx.us or by
emailing ceverett@tahc.state.tx.us .)
While commendable progress has been made in Maverick, Dimmit and Webb
counties, fever tick-infested premises have been detected at the rate of
more than one per day in Starr and Zapata counties since April 1,
said Dr. Hillman.
Since October 1, 46 tick-infested premises have been detected in Zapata
County, and 36 in Starr County. One tick-infested premises each have been
found in Brooks, Cameron and Kinney counties.
Temporary preventive quarantines were established in Starr and Zapata
counties in summer 2007. Due to increasing tick infestations, the
quarantine areas were enlarged in April and July 2008 to its current area
of 423,509 acres, which also includes a small area in Jim Hogg County, said
Dr. Hillman.
Now especially disturbing is the cluster of tick-infested premises near the
Starr-Hidalgo county line, away from the permanent or temporary quarantine
area, noted Dr. Hillman. This cluster of infested premises is quarantined,
as are the premises in a 10-mile perimeter. Epidemiologists are working to
determine the source and distribution of this infestation. Whether it was
caused by ticky wildlife or inappropriate livestock movement is not yet
known. It also is still too early to know if an additional temporary
preventive quarantine area is needed.
Each time another tick-infested premises is added, the eradication program
costs rise, as USDA and TAHC inspectors must manually inspect cattle and
horses and haul equipment to treat the animals on a 14-day cycle for dips or
sprays, or a 28-day cycle for cattle in the product trial for Dectomax, an
injectable acaracide. Furthermore, wildlife must be treated for fever ticks
with medicated feed, which is removed prior to hunting season, due to the
drugs withdrawal period. It is also very costly for the producers who must
gather their cattle. In south Texas, helicopters, dogs and cowboys on
horseback may be needed to coax cattle out of the dense underbrush, he said.
A premises may be found to be tick-infested today, but ticky cattle may
have been moved from that ranch in shipments for the past six months or
even longer, said Dr. Hillman. We must obtain all available records, trace
the animal movement, and conduct inspections and treatment to determine if
ticks have been spread. This is extremely time-consuming, particularly when
animals have no identification, prolonging and complicating the detective
work of our inspectors and epidemiologists.
Dr. Hillman noted that, to be fully functional, the USDAs fever tick program
requires about $14.7 million a year for personnel, equipment, supplies, and
treatment product. He stressed that TAHC field staff members are rotated
into south Texas to complement the federal workforce in the impacted areas
and that TAHC staff handle all tracing of cattle moved from infested
premises and their subsequent inspection and treatment.
The fever tick eradication effort has received several infusions of
emergency funding, including $4.9 million in January. While this will be
sufficient to address immediate issues until fall, the USDA fever tick
eradication program needs dependable funding to support the control and
eradication of this pest that has the potential for spread and
sustainability throughout the southern U.S., stressed Dr. Hillman.
Concern over potential fever tick exposure has led some south Texas
producers to voluntarily request inspection and treatment of livestock
shipments headed north. Likewise, south Texas producers have volunteered to
have cattle inspected during normal managerial working of the herd. This
voluntary inspection can be a valuable marketing tool for south Texas
ranchers, said Dr. Hillman. Likewise, some buyers of south Texas cattle are
requesting that cattle be inspected and treated before accepting shipments,
to ensure they receive fever tick-free cattle.
Fever ticks are not just a Texas issue. Although weve been able to keep
these pests somewhat contained, they could escape our boundaries, and
similar staffing, inspection and treatment will be needed in other states,
too. Fever ticks are a foreign tick that has made an incursion into the
U.S. and this pest needs to be addressed comprehensively, before it
spreads. This includes the approval and use of new, innovative treatments
for both livestock and wildlife.
Dr. Hillman noted that current approved treatments are limited to dips and
sprays for cattle and horses, and a trial is ongoing for Dectomax, an
injectable acaracide. Wildlife treatment is restricted to medicated feeds
and a unique four-poster treatment system. New products have been explored,
but approval for use has not been forthcoming, he said. It does no good to
develop an effective product, then leave it on the shelf during a massive
fever tick outbreak.
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