Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2470853 Veterinary Parasitology 2010 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Three cattle farms with ticks, Rhipicephalus microplus, thought to be resistant to ivermectin in Yucatan, Mexico were studied (SFDO, SPN, LUADY). Each field-population was collected and tested twice several months apart. The larval immersion test was used on the progeny of collected adult females to test the susceptibility to ivermectin. Dose-mortality regressions, lethal concentrations (LC), their confidence intervals and slope were estimated by probit analysis. Resistance ratios (RR) were determined in the three investigated populations at the LC50 and LC99 estimates. The LUADY (RR50: 2.04 and 2.29, RR99: 2.67 and 3.55), SPN (RR50: 3.55 and 3.68, RR99: 8.19–11.06) and SFDO (RR50: 6.84 and 8.59, RR99: 54.17 and 87.86) ticks had significantly higher LC50/LC99 than the reference susceptible Deutch strain, demonstrating resistance in the field-collected populations. Furthermore, there was significant difference between LC50/LC99 of the SFDO, SPN and LUADY tick populations, which indicates not only the presence of resistant populations, but also different levels of resistance to ivermectin in the field populations studied. There was no difference observed at the LC50 nor LC99 estimates at two different times of collection from any of the three populations studied. In conclusion, we report for the first time field populations of R. microplus resistant to ivermectin in Mexico.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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