What to do about parasites
Parasites are little animals that live on the skin or in the
bodies of other animals.
· Parasites that live on the
skin
Chief among the parasites that live on the skin of cattle are
the ticks.
Ticks stick to the skin of the animals and suck blood.
If an animal has many ticks, it can lose up to half a litre of
blood a day. After a time it may become very weak.
Ticks wound animals.
Often you can see an animal's ears damaged by ticks.
Often you can see animals walking with difficulty or with wounds
on the udder. In that case the cows are difficult to milk, and they will not let
their calves suck.
Ticks may also bring serious diseases.
They spread fevers, typhus, brucellosis and piroplasmosis.
Ticks can be killed with a pesticide such as toxophene.
Ticks can also be killed with paraffin oil. - Soak a piece of
cloth in paraffin oil and rub the places on the body where there are ticks.
The veterinary services can tell you what pesticides to use, and
can help you to apply the treatment.
This must be done over and over again.
· Parasites that live in the
body
Generally parasites live in the digestive tract. Many are worms:
tapeworms, roundworms, pinworms. Sometimes they live in the muscles or the
lungs, as for instance strongyles.
They injure the digestive tract and the animals cannot digest
properly. Animals that have worms lose weight and sometimes die.
To kill these parasites, the animals are given medicine such as
phenothiazine. There are traditional medicines that can also be used.
A good way to control parasites is to let pastures rest.
Why?
The eggs of the parasites fall on the pasture with the animals'
excrement. They grow in the grass, and then they can attach themselves to the
skin of the animals, or the animals may eat them together with grass (ticks,
worms).
If you let the pasture rest long enough, the parasites cannot
feed on the skin or in the bodies of the animals. So they die.
To control parasites, rest your pasture. Do not put the animals
always on the same
pasture.