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Managing Flies on Dairies

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typhoid, cholera, bacillary dysentery, tuberculosis, infantile diarrhea, ... House Fly Life Cycle. Cycle takes 10-21 days (as little as 7 in right conditions) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing Flies on Dairies


1
Managing Flies on Dairies
  • Kelly V. Tindall
  • Extension Entomologist
  • Twin Falls County

2
Problems with House Flies
  • Nuisance
  • obnoxious to workers nearby residences
  • Public health issue
  • Transport gt100 associated pathogens
  • garbage, sewage and other sources of filth
  • transferred by mouthparts, body parts, feces, etc
  • humans and animals
  • typhoid, cholera, bacillary dysentery,
    tuberculosis, infantile diarrhea, parasitic worms

3

House Fly Life Cycle
Adults attracted to organic matter
Lay eggs
Cycle takes 10-21 days (as little as 7 in right
conditions)
Adults emerge from pupae
Larvae hatch feed on organic matter
Adults live about 30 days Female lay up to 900
eggs
Larvae crawl to a drier area to pupate
4
Management Techniques
  • Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
  • Management of pests that incorporates many
    practices for environmentally friendly and
    economically feasible control
  • Physical/Mechanical sticky traps, fly swatter
  • Cultural proper sanitation
  • Biological parasitoids, predators
  • Chemical insecticides

5
Reliance on Insecticides
  • Elimination is impossible
  • Select for insecticide resistance non-control
  • New, effective insecticides are few
  • Concern about residues in livestock products,
    worker health and safety, and the environment

6
Mechanical Control
  • Sticky tapes, paper, ribbons
  • Large sticky products are effective small to
    moderate populations
  • Fly-free zone in the milk room
  • Tight-fitting screen doors and windows
  • maintaining tightly closed can greatly reduce fly
    numbers

7
Monitoring
  • Baited traps - gallon milk jugs
  • Four 2-inch holes cut
  • Bait inside bottom of jug (entrance)
  • Attractant (muscalure) insecticide
  • Suspend from rafters
  • Minimum of 5 at equidistant locations throughout
    each animal housing unit
  • Count flies after 7 days
  • gt250 flies/week high levels of fly activity

8
Monitoring
  • Spot cards
  • 3X5 inch white file cards
  • Placed on resting surfaces
  • look for areas fly fecal and regurgitation spots
  • Minimum of 5 at equidistant locations throughout
    each animal housing unit
  • Count flies after 7 days
  • gt100 spots/card per week high levels of fly
    activity

9
Cultural Control
  • Most important - reduce ability to breed
  • Identify breeding sites
  • Monitor regularly
  • Eliminate/reduce breeding sites
  • General suggestions
  • Stop water leaks promptly
  • Manage feed storage areas
  • Maintain adequate ventilation dry manure

10
Potential Breeding Sites
  • Calf hutches (corners)
  • Silo leak spill areas (silage)
  • Animal stalls pens, feed preparation, storage
    manger areas, water sources
  • Calf, hospital, maternity areas
  • Water tanks
  • Feed troughs
  • Inside and outside manure handling areas

http//www.nysipm.cornell.edu/factsheets/dairy/bar
nflies/breed_sites.asp
11
Cleaning Guidelines
  • 1 problem animal pens
  • 1st Calve hutches
  • remove manure bedding at least 1/week
  • 2nd Free-stall barns
  • Design for complete manure removal proper
    drainage
  • Moist feed near storage and feeding sites
  • clean out at least weekly

12
Biological Control
Mites - eggs
Wasps - pupae
Beetles - eggs
13
Biological Control
  • Parasitoids - most important
  • Climate impacts efficacy
  • Preference for different breeding habitats

14
Parasitoid Life Cycle
Parasite searches for fly pupae
Parasite drills a hole in a pupa and lays eggs
(usually kills pupa) Multiple eggs in per pupa
1 female kills 100 fly pupae
Egg to adult takes 2-3 weeks
New adult parasites emerge
Eggs hatch immature wasps eat pupae from the
inside out
Pupate
15

Relationship of Fly Parasitoid Life Cycles
1 Wasp 100 dead pupae SO 9 wasps/fly
7-21 days
14-21 days
1 fly 900 eggs over 30 days
16
Biological Control
  • Parasitoids - most important
  • Climate impacts efficacy
  • Preference for different breeding habitats
  • Flies have advantages to get ahead of parasitoids
  • develops twice as fast from egg to adult
  • lives longer, and lays more eggs than parasitoids
  • More tolerant to insecticides than parasitoids

17
Hints for Parasitic Wasp Success
  • Get species appropriate for Idaho
  • Best results with manure management and other
    tactics
  • Because of differences in fly and parasite life
    cycle, multiple releases must be made
  • Early use helps prevent rapid growth of fly
    populations AND increase parasitoids populations
  • Minimize negative insecticide impacts
  • Select baits and pyrethrin space sprays

18
Dollars Sense of Wasps
  • How many parasitoids should be released?
  • 200 parasitoids per milking cow / week
  • 1,000 parasitoids per calf / week
  • Adjust to find effective and affordable rates
  • When should parasitoids be released?
  • At the first sign of fly activity (mid-April)
    through fall (late Sept early Oct)
  • Early release helps keep fly numbers down

19
Dollars Sense of Wasps
  • Are parasitoids cost effective?
  • Prices vary, average is 11-13/10,000
  • Rate of 200 per cow 0.22-0.26/week
  • 1000/hutch 1.10-1.30/week
  • Cost of parasitoids is offset by reductions in
    insecticide treatments
  • IPM vs non-IPM fly control
  • 80 fewer insecticide treatments
  • Fly populations are 50 lower

20
Chemical Control
  • Chemicals are important BUT not the only tool
  • Overuse fly resistance and kill beneficials
  • Baits contained insecticide used with an
    attractant
  • Treat areas where adult flies congregate
  • Avoid spraying breeding sites and residual
    premise sprays (protect beneficials)
  • Combination of multiple methods is more effective
    and provides more sustainable control

21
Chemical Control
  • Space sprays
  • Quick knockdown in an enclosed air space
  • Little residual
  • Compatible with fly parasitoids
  • Baits
  • For managing moderate fly populations
  • Compatible with fly parasitoids
  • Residual premise sprays
  • Treatment of building surfaces with residual
    sprays has been one of the most popular
  • Many reported cases of insecticide resistance

22
Chemical Control cont
  • Larvicides
  • Direct treatment of manure
  • Avoid to protect natural enemies of flies
  • Occasional spot treatment of heavily infested
    areas
  • Controlled-release formulations
  • Feed additives/minerals that result in the
    insecticide's being excreted with animal feces
  • Whole-animal sprays
  • Sprays made directly on the animals
  • More for stable fly control
  • Control is short-lived

23
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