Ticks Take Over Tennessee Pastures As UT Puts Farmers On High Alert

University of Tennessee Extension this week warned Tennessee farmers that tick infestations are spiking across pastures and fence lines, with a warm, wet spring creating prime real estate for the bloodsuckers. Producers around the state are reporting dense clusters of ticks on cattle and along tree lines, and Extension officials say heavy infestations can cause anemia and, in some cases, livestock deaths. The alert has many farms scrambling to step up inspections, quarantine incoming animals and check in with veterinarians before reaching for chemical controls.

Extension warning and boots-on-the-ground reports

As reported by The Rogersville Review, UT Extension issued an infestation alert on Friday linking the surge in ticks to recent weather shifts and cautioning producers to brace for heavy tick burdens. The report notes that Extension guidance singles out the invasive Asian longhorned tick showing up in shaded, moist pasture edges and along creek banks, exactly where cattle tend to travel. Local farmers quoted in the piece describe illnesses in some animals after intense tick pressure and say they are working closely with veterinarians and Extension agents to respond.

Tick suspects and what treatments are on the table

The species most often implicated is the Asian longhorned tick (Haemaphysalis longicornis), which can reproduce quickly and pile up in large clusters on a single animal. Virginia Cooperative Extension notes that these ticks generally appear susceptible to many products already used for other cattle ticks and lists macrocyclic lactones, including Dectomax®, Eprinex®, Cydectin®, LongRange® and Ivomec®, as effective on animals. Pyrethroid pour-ons and appropriately labeled fly tags can also help bring down tick numbers. That guidance adds that pasture treatments should be targeted, that carbaryl (Sevin®) is one of the few products labeled for pasture use and that a single application is unlikely to provide complete control.

Integrated control and the resistance tightrope

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