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| ==Control== | | ==Control== |
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| + | *In warmer climates where rainfall is present all year round and there is a constant high relative humidity, tick activity may be constant throughout the year |
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| + | *If there is a limited vegetation mat, then tick activity will be influenced by seasonal rainfall and the vegetation transpiration |
| + | |
| + | *In temperate climates there is usually two distinct periods of tick activity coinciding with warmer temperatures |
| + | **E.g. Spring and Autumn |
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| + | *Some temperate climates only have one distinct period of tick activity in the spring |
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| + | 1. Killing ticks on the ground |
| + | *Altering microclimate |
| + | **E.g. Pasture improvement |
| + | *Starving (spelling) pasture |
| + | **Only useful if ticks do not feed on other hosts |
| + | *Burning pasture to kill off ticks on the ground |
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| + | 2. Separate the host from the infection |
| + | *Stock management |
| + | **removing stock from infected pasture when ticks are most active |
| + | *Fencing off infected areas |
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| + | 3. Killing ticks on the host |
| + | *Ascaricides |
| + | *E.g. Dippind, spraying, pour-on solutions |
| + | *For more information on ascaricides see '''here''' |
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| + | 4. Enhancing host resistance |
| + | *Stock hybridisation |
| + | **E.g. Bredding the higher resistant ''Bos indicus'' with the less resistant ''Bos Taurus'' |
| + | *Vaccination against the hidden antigens in the tick's gut |
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| ==Links== | | ==Links== |
| *[[Parasitic skin infections - Pathology#Ticks|Skin infections pathology]] | | *[[Parasitic skin infections - Pathology#Ticks|Skin infections pathology]] |