Abstract

AbstractThe effect of ivermectin treatment of cattle on the rate of dung beetle colonization of cow pats was assessed by pitfall trapping in Denmark, Tanzania and Zimbabwe. Ivermectin was injected subcutaneously into heifers at the recommended dose of 0.2 mg/kg body weight, and dung to be used as bait in pitfalls was collected at intervals after treatment. In one experiment in Denmark, species of the scarab beetle Aphodius and the hydrophilids Sphaeridium and Cercyon, preferred control dung from untreated cattle; no preference was found in two other experiments, involving some of the same species. In the Tanzanian trials, the overall tendency for scarabaeid beetles was to prefer control dung. In Zimbabwe, two scarabaeid species (Euoniticellus intermedius (Reiche) and Liatongus militaris (Castelnau), both belonging to Oniticellini) were particularly attracted to dung from treated cattle; two other scarabaeids showed no preference. It is concluded: 1. That ivermectin therapy can affect the rate of dung colonization by attracting or repelling beetles. 2. That the responses are probably not caused by ivermectin per se, but by some side effect, the nature of which is obscure and unpredictable with our present knowledge.

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