What parasites should dairy producers be on the lookout for during winter months?

Cold weather may slow down pests, but parasites are a different story.

Veterinarians say now is not the time to let up the gas on deworming.

“So, as we move into the winter season, the key external parasites that dairy producers need to be on the lookout for are lice and mange mites. The lice that we worry about, there’s biting lice and sucking lice. The biting lice tend to feed on debris, skin, hair, and secretions that are on the skin’s surface, whereas those sucking lice can attach to the cow and feed on blood. The mange mites typically will live around the tail head and the hindquarters. The one that will see most often, particularly in dairy cattle, is chorioptic mange, and we also sarcoptic mange that can be a bit more severe, but it’s far less common than chorioptic,” said Dr. Jennifer Roberts, a professional services veterinarian with Boehringer-Ingelheim.

Roberts says whatever the parasite may be, they all will have an impact on your bottom line.

Related Stories
The report highlighted the role rural development programs play in supporting housing, infrastructure and essential services.
Iowa Congressman Randy Feenstra says the proposal would allow retailers to decide whether they want to offer E15 year-round.
The award recognizes wheat varieties that deliver strong results throughout the milling and baking process
Allendale analysts say lower hog production has yet to generate the typical seasonal price movement.
The National Milk Producers Federation says AI adoption continues expanding both inside and outside the barn.
Volunteers stepped in to help producers rebuild after damaging storms swept through parts of central Nebraska.

LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

Unlike facilities focused on merchant ammonia, Meadowlark would convert its on-site ammonia into UAN and sulfur-containing ATS fertilizers used by regional crop producers.
Markets have been slow to respond as crop stress worsens across major winter wheat regions, where quality ratings have fallen to multi-decade lows.
Mike Stranz joins us to discuss farm safety net reforms, NFU’s proposed IMSET program, and the challenges facing family farmers nationwide.
The investigation does not prove wrongdoing, but it raises federal scrutiny of a major cost center for crop producers.