Abstract

The efficacy of orally administered powdered aloe juice (Aloe ferox) was evaluated against ticks on cattle and against ticks and fleas on dogs. Twelve calves were each infested over a 25-day period with approximately 4000 larvae of Rhipicephalus (Boophilus) decoloratus and allocated to 3 groups of 4 calves each. Three days after the last larval infestation and daily for 22 days thereafter, the calves in 1 group were fed 5 mg/kg body weight and those in another 25 mg/kg body weight of powdered aloe juice incorporated in game maintenance pellets, while the animals in the 3rd group received only pellets. Detached female ticks were collected daily and counted and the weights and the fertility of groups of 50 engorged female ticks collected from the animals were ascertained. The powdered aloe juice in the game maintenance pellets had no effect on the tick burdens of the calves or on the fertility of the ticks. Six dogs, in each of 2 groups, were treated daily for 15 consecutive days, commencing on Day -5 before the 1st tick infestation, with either 0.39 g or 0.74 g of powdered aloe juice, administered orally in gelatin capsules, while a 3rd group of 6 dogs served as untreated controls. All the dogs were challenged with Haemaphysalis leachi on Days 0 and + 7, and with Ctenocephalides felis on Days + 1 and + 8, and efficacy assessments were made 1 day after flea and 2 days after tick challenge, respectively. Treatment was not effective against ticks or fleas on the dogs.

Highlights

  • Seventy-three per cent of African communal farmers in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa use herbal remedies for their livestock because they are cheap, locally available, convenient to administer and because they believe that they are effective[6]

  • There was no significant difference between the weights of the engorged female ticks that had been collected from the various groups between Days +3 and +20, nor between the weights of the egg masses produced by these females, nor did the powdered aloe juice affect egg hatchability

  • Neither of these dosage levels had any effect on the magnitude of the tick burdens of the treated calves compared with those of the untreated controls, nor did they affect the fertility of the ticks

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Seventy-three per cent of African communal farmers in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa use herbal remedies for their livestock because they are cheap, locally available, convenient to administer and because they believe that they are effective[6]. They use these remedies because they are unfamiliar with, or unaware of, modern medicines and their efficacy, or consider them to be too expensive[6]. A well-known and highly regarded medicament is the juice of the leaves of Aloe ferox.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call