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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Host resistance to cattle tick (Boophilus microplus) in Brahman (Bos indicus) cattle. III.* Growth on previously unexposed animals

BM Wagland

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 29(2) 401 - 409
Published: 1978

Abstract

Length measurements were used to compare the growth of the parasitic stages of Boophilus microplus on previously unexposed Brahman (Bos indicus) and Shorthorn (B. taurus) cattle. Growth curves based on the length measurements were constructed. Growth was slower on Brahmans than on Shorthorns during the first 24 hr of larval and nymphal instars. After the first 24 hr, the growth rates of larvae, and of nymphs, during feeding to engorgement were the same on the rump and belly regions of both species of cattle. Larvae and nymphs engorged more slowly on the brisket than they did on the rump and belly regions of the Brahmans. The surface skin temperature was lower on the brisket of the Brahmans. On the basis of change in the length of the tick during development on Brahmans, 16 age categories were established, so that the length of the tick may be used to estimate the ages of ticks in populations on Brahman cattle. Age categories were also defined for ticks which had been processed in formalin and hot alkali.

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*Part II, Aust. J. Agric. Res., 29: 395 (1978).

https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9780401

© CSIRO 1978

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