Ticks transfer diseases to animals and humans. Ticks create major financial losses to livestock and have a variation of adverse special effects on cattle hosts. Tick working as possible vectors for helminth parasites and haemoprotozoa cause blood loss directly. Large numbers of tick’s drinking red blood induce anaemia and decreased living weight in cattle animals, even though their bites can damage the skins. Ticks, are answerable for important financial losses due to their potential to transmit rickettsial, viral infections and protozoan to cattles. Here are a variety of ticks-control tactics available, but then again each has its own set of problems. The importance of ticks and their control are the topic of this review. Ticks have contro...
Babesiosis is a tick-borne, intraerythrocytic protozoan parasitic infection that causes significant...
This book chapter describes the most common control methods: the use of genetically resistant animal...
BEZUIDENHOUT, J. D. & BIGALKE, R. D., 1987. The control of heartwater by means of tick control. ...
Ticks transfer diseases to animals and humans. Ticks create major financial losses to livestock and ...
International audienceThe cattle industry is one of the most important agroeconomic activities in Me...
Ticks and the diseases they transmit are widely distributed throughout the world, particularly in tr...
Multi-species tick infestations are common in cattle (especially in crossbred) and buffaloes. Ticks ...
Ticks are economically the most important pests of cattle and other domestic species in tropical and...
Tick-borne diseases are every cattle owner s nightmare. With redwater fever, heartwater, anaplasmosi...
Tick-borne diseases are every cattle owner s nightmare. With redwater fever, heartwater, anaplasmosi...
Widespread and increasing resistance to most available acaracides threatens both global livestock in...
Tick-borne diseases are every cattle owner s nightmare. With redwater fever, heartwater, anaplasmosi...
Ticks and tick-borne diseases affect animal and human health worldwide and are the cause of signific...
Ticks are obligate haematophagous ectoparasites of wild and domestic animals as well as humans, cons...
The present review article explains different zoonotic diseases transmitted by various species of ti...
Babesiosis is a tick-borne, intraerythrocytic protozoan parasitic infection that causes significant...
This book chapter describes the most common control methods: the use of genetically resistant animal...
BEZUIDENHOUT, J. D. & BIGALKE, R. D., 1987. The control of heartwater by means of tick control. ...
Ticks transfer diseases to animals and humans. Ticks create major financial losses to livestock and ...
International audienceThe cattle industry is one of the most important agroeconomic activities in Me...
Ticks and the diseases they transmit are widely distributed throughout the world, particularly in tr...
Multi-species tick infestations are common in cattle (especially in crossbred) and buffaloes. Ticks ...
Ticks are economically the most important pests of cattle and other domestic species in tropical and...
Tick-borne diseases are every cattle owner s nightmare. With redwater fever, heartwater, anaplasmosi...
Tick-borne diseases are every cattle owner s nightmare. With redwater fever, heartwater, anaplasmosi...
Widespread and increasing resistance to most available acaracides threatens both global livestock in...
Tick-borne diseases are every cattle owner s nightmare. With redwater fever, heartwater, anaplasmosi...
Ticks and tick-borne diseases affect animal and human health worldwide and are the cause of signific...
Ticks are obligate haematophagous ectoparasites of wild and domestic animals as well as humans, cons...
The present review article explains different zoonotic diseases transmitted by various species of ti...
Babesiosis is a tick-borne, intraerythrocytic protozoan parasitic infection that causes significant...
This book chapter describes the most common control methods: the use of genetically resistant animal...
BEZUIDENHOUT, J. D. & BIGALKE, R. D., 1987. The control of heartwater by means of tick control. ...