1. Tick fever agents in Holstein calves grazing in a tropical region: predisposing factors, impact on milk production, productivity, and role of Rhipicephalus microplus in epidemiology.
- Author
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de Moraes IML, Afonso PHA, Salvador VF, Leal LLLL, Cavalcante ASA, Couto LFM, Heller LM, Tamiozo GL, Zapa DMB, Soares VE, Ferreira LL, and Lopes WDZ
- Subjects
- Animals, Cattle, Female, Lactation, Babesiosis epidemiology, Babesiosis parasitology, Milk, Anaplasmosis epidemiology, Anaplasma marginale physiology, Babesia, Babesia bovis, Dairying, Rhipicephalus physiology, Cattle Diseases parasitology, Cattle Diseases epidemiology, Tick Infestations veterinary, Tick Infestations epidemiology, Tick Infestations parasitology, Tropical Climate
- Abstract
The present study aimed to evaluate under dairy farm conditions the predisposing factors, impact on milk production and productivity, and the role of Rhipicephalus microplus in the epidemiology of tick fever agents in Holstein calves grazing in a tropical region. A total of 4292 pure female Holsteins were evaluated at a commercial farm. Until April 2020, calves had contact with R. microplus for between 3 and 24 months, while after April 2020, no animal had further contact with ticks. Three times a week the rectal temperature (RT) of all animals was determined, and blood samples were collected for evaluation of tick fever (TF) agents from those that showed RT >39.3 °C. Specific treatment was performed against Anaplasma marginale, Babesia bigemina and Babesia bovis when these TF agents were diagnosed in the blood smears. The number of relapses and treatments for TF agents were sub-classified into scales (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7-10 treatments or relapses, and animals that received blood transfusions). Within each sub-class, the health data of calves during lactation along with productivity data were analyzed. Based in the results, whether an animal received colostrum enriched with powdered colostrum substitute, whether the animal was an embryo transfer calf, and the weight at which each calf was weaned were ascertained as factors leading to more recurrences or treatments against TF agents in post-weaned calves. On average, each recurrence of TF agents that a heifer presented between three and seven months decreased milk production by 213.5 liters in the first lactation. Calves that received a blood transfusion had lower milk production at first lactation; lower weight at first fixed-time artificial insemination (FTAI); older age at first FTAI; older age at first, second, and third calving; and delayed age at third calving by 140 days compared to the farm average. R. microplus was the main agent causing clinical cases of TF on the farm, and 10,770 treatments against TF agents were carried out when calves aged between three and seven months had contact with this tick species (2018 and 2019). When the animals no longer had contact with ticks (2022 and 2023), there were no recurrences or treatments against TF agents despite the presence on the farm of S. calcitrans, which can maintain the transmission of A. marginale to the herd., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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