All I Want For Christmas Is A Bot-Free Horse
Bots aren't a parasite that necessarily spring to
mind when planning your horse's worming programme, however bot infestation
can have potentially dangerous results. Bots aren't worms, but the
larvae of the horse bot fly, which attach themselves to the abdomen,
legs and the throat of grazing horses in late summer. The horse
then licks them off and the larvae attach to the stomach lining
where they develop into full-grown bots which can cause ulcers in
the stomach wall and can occasionally penetrate the wall with fatal
results.
A
single dose of Vectin, one of the wormers featured in Intervet's
3-year worming plan, should be administered after first frosts have
killed adult flies in December. The apple flavoured gel, which contains
ivermectin as its active ingredient, is available in an easy-dose
syringe and is suitable for use in foals and pregnant mares.
The
3-year worming plan advises horse owners on which wormer to use
strategically at key times of the year and on a three-year rotation
during the grazing season to help prevent the build up of resistance
to wormers. Vectin should also be used as part of this rotation
programme every 8 - 10 weeks during the grazing season, between
April and August, to kill the adult and larval stages of the important
intestinal parasites of horses; the wormer will remove adult and
immature stages of small redworms, including strains that are resistant
to benzimidazole-based wormers, adult and arterial stages of large
redworms and and adult and immature lungworms.
Other
products featured in Intervet's 3-year plan include Pyratape P and
Panacur.
For
further information about Vectin, Pyratape P and Panacur, please
contact Intervet's Vet Support Group on 01908 685685.
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