Warble fly

Warble flies
Ox Warble-fly (Hypoderma bovis)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Diptera
Family: Oestridae
Subfamily: Hypodermatinae
Genus: Hypoderma
Latreille, 1818
Species

Warble fly is a name given to the genus Hypoderma, large flies which are parasitic on cattle and deer. Other names include "heel flies", "bomb flies", and "gad flies", while their larvae are often called "cattle grubs" or "wolves." Common species of warble fly include Hypoderma lineatum (horse), Hypoderma bovis (cattle) and Hypoderma tarandi (reindeer) .

Adult warble flies are large, hairy and bee-like; brown, orange or yellow in color. The adults have vestigial mouthparts and so do not feed during their short lifespan, which can be as little as five days.[1]

They are found in all continents of the northern hemisphere, principally between 25 and 60 degrees latitude.

Contents

Infestations

The fly will lay eggs on the foreleg of the affected cattle. These will be ingested by licking, and be swallowed. Internal cycle involves the passing oesophagus muscles and spinal cord before subcutaneous re-emerging.

When they re-emerge, the larvae cause many swellings ("warbles") under the skin, causing some harm to animals, but not as a general disease. It doesn't burrow into the flesh, but stays under the skin (hence, its scientific name Hypoderma). Nevertheless, when accidentally destroyed by pressure, the larvae can cause large purulent swellings.

From the subcutaneous swelling, the warble will puncture the skin when coming out of the bovid. From those numerous holes, the hide is rendered valueless.

The migrating larvae can cause damage to meat as the tunnels they make fill with a substance known as butcher's jelly.[1] Growing livestock may have a lower daily weight gain. Milk yields may also suffer, but in adult cows, the infestation is generally limited, due to immunisation following the first infestation, as a calf.

Humans

The disease Intracerebral myiasis is a rare infestation of the brain by a Hypoderma bovis larva. These larvae can penetrate into the brain by a path which remains unknown. Possible effects include convulsions, intracerebral hematoma and clinical signs. This condition is very rare with only three cases in medical literature.[2]

Treatment and prevention

Warble fly has been eradicated in many countries, beginning from Denmark and Western Germany, in the 1960s. They have also been eradicated from the United Kingdom, [3] as well as from Belgium. The method was the pour-on application of an organophosphorus compound.

From the 1980s, the preventive treatment is easier, by subcutaneous use of Ivermectin, but the warble fly remains present in North Africa.

Rolls-Royce

In 1969 Mulliner Park Ward, a firm specialising in building car bodies for Rolls-Royce, reported that 40% of the (on average) seven hides per car needed to make leather car seats had to be thrown away on account of blemishes caused by warble flies and barbed wire while the cattle involved were still alive.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Piper, Ross (2007), Extraordinary Animals: An Encyclopedia of Curious and Unusual Animals, Greenwood Press.
  2. ^ Kalelioğlu M, Aktürk G, Aktürk F et al. (December 1989). "Intracerebral myiasis from Hypoderma bovis larva in a child. Case report". J. Neurosurg. 71 (6): 929–931. doi:10.3171/jns.1989.71.6.0929. PMID 2585086. 
  3. ^ "Disease factsheet: Warble Fly". http://www.defra.gov.uk/foodfarm/farmanimal/diseases/atoz/warblefly/index.htm. 
  4. ^ "Blame the warble flies". Motor: page 67. date 1 March 1969. 

External links