Horse & Rider

Q&A: Feed-Through Fly Control

Here’s what you need to know about feed-through products that break the life cycle of those pesky flies.

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For this Q&A, we directed questions to David Turoff, DVM, owner of Foothill Mobile Veterinary Service in Placervill­e, California ( foothill mobilevet.com), and board member with the Equitarian Initiative (helping working horses, donkeys, and mules worldwide; equitarian­initiative.org).

Why are there so many flies at horse facilities?

This may seem like an obvious question, but the reasons are important to the issue of fly control. Flies breed and proliferat­e wherever there’s warmth, moisture, and decaying organic matter. The species most at issue around horses in North America are the common house fly ( Musca domestica), stable fly ( Stomoxys calcitrans), and horn fly ( Haematobia irritans).

How can I control flies around my barn?

No one method will work alone, but the most important effort is to practice good facility hygiene to minimize damp bedding and manure. Other elements include passive fly traps and paper, the use of surface-applied poison sprays such as pyrethrum, fly- predator wasps distribute­d on breeding areas, and feed-through insect- growth regulators (IGRs).

What are IGRs?

Two are in common use, diflubenzu­ron and cyromazine. Both work by inhibiting the formation of chitin, the primary structural component of the cuticle (“skin”) of the fly larvae. Both have been shown to work well as long as the program begins at the start of fly season and the product is reliably given every day.

Are IGRs safe?

FDA safety studies showed no real potential for toxicity to any species other than insects, and there have been no documented reports of toxicity since, in the decades they’ve been in use. This makes sense, because only insects have chitin.

Do IGRs have any disadvanta­ges?

They can be expensive, and they must be given individual­ly to every horse every day. Also, they won’t prevent the developmen­t of flies breeding anywhere other than where horses deposit manure. IGRs may also kill dung beetles, which are partially responsibl­e for biodegrada­tion of manure, although there’s conflictin­g evidence about this. In any event, dung beetles are already killed by residual ivermectin (a commonly used dewormer) in horse manure.

 ??  ?? Each of your horses must receive his feed-through fly- control pellets daily. IGRs (insectgrow­th regulators) interfere with fl y larvae’s ability to develop chitin, or “skin.”
Each of your horses must receive his feed-through fly- control pellets daily. IGRs (insectgrow­th regulators) interfere with fl y larvae’s ability to develop chitin, or “skin.”

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