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Dr.Nirbhay Kumar Singh

Dr.Nirbhay Kumar Singh

Cattle Fever Tick Research Laboratory,USA.

Title: Prospects for Biological Control of Cattle Fever Ticks by Natural Enemies along the Texas - Mexico border

Biography

Biography: Dr.Nirbhay Kumar Singh

Abstract

Cattle fever ticks (CFT), Rhipicephalus microplus and Rhipicephalus annulatus are vectors of babesiosis which can be lethal to cattle and causes significant production losses.  These ticks are not native to the U.S. and have been eradicated but  are endemic to Mexico and continue to re-invade the U.S. along the Texas - Mexico border.  Resistance to acaricides, presence of wildlife hosts such as nilgai antelope and whitetailed deer, along with exotic vegetation along the international border that favors survival of cattle fever ticks are challenging the continued success of the cattle fever tick eradication program. Classical biological control uses naturally occurring species of living organisms as antagonists to reduce pest populations. Augmenting populations of existing antagonists or importing exotic antagonists to reduce the density of a pest population is required to achieve this goal. For the control of cattle ticks, candidate methods include ants, predatory mites, chickens, parasitoid waspd, Bacillus thuringiensis, entomopathogenic nematodes and oxpeckers. Biological control using specialist parasitoids, predators and/or nematodes from the native ranges of CFT is not a stand-alone strategy but could complement existing strategies such as acaricides and vaccines in the transboundary region between Mexico and Texas. It could thus reduce invasion pressure from Mexico and may be the only method for CFT control on wild hosts such as whitetailed deer and exotic nilgai, which have become important for the spread ticks in the region. Work is in progress on means to discover and evaluate natural enemies of CFT needed to investigate the potential for classical biological control. These methods must be able to detect parasitism and predation on all life stages (eggs, larvae, nymphs, adults) of CFT, both on and off the host animal. Here we discuss the challenges in identification of candidate biological control agents and develop methods to be used in foreign exploration in the native ranges of CFT.

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