Concho Area Residents Warned Of Botfly Infestation

Botfly | Botfly lifecycle [Photo from the CDC]

On Monday, Apache County Supervisor Doyel Shamley advised constituents of recent reports of a Botfly infestation in the Concho Valley area, and Apache County District 3 in general.

“We had some reports last week from a resident of catching rodents on their properties and them having lesions, boils, abscesses, holes in sores, etc. We got a specimen captured and sent to the state labs on Friday and today we learned it is from Botflies,” said Shamley. “Apache County Public Health and District 3 would like to determine, if possible, breeding sites, etc.”

Shamley asks residents, who find or catch vermin and rodents with these lesions and sores, or have livestock with these sores, to contact Apache County Public Health at (928) 337-7607, so that officials can start mapping a possible source.

According to Shamley, stagnant water can develop into mosquito breeding areas, which are a common vector for spreading Botfly eggs.

The Arizona State Lab provided the following information on the Botfly:

Adult female botflies lay their eggs on blood-sucking insects, such as mosquitoes or ticks, that they capture during flight. This practice is known as phoresy. After a period of 10 to 140 days, the host insect consumes a blood meal. This transfers the mature botfly eggs from the flying insect to the warm-blooded animal, which then hatch upon feeling the temperature increase. Adult females can also attach their eggs directly onto the hairs of mammal hosts. Egg hatching and larvae movement may cause the mammal to bite or scratch at the area.

The mammal may consume some of the first instar larvae by licking them. Alternatively, the larvae may travel down hair follicles or through bite wounds and burrow into the mammal’s skin. From here, the larvae undergo their final two instars, or molt periods, in the skin of the mammal or in the digestive tract during the winter. Larvae developing in the digestive tract attach to the system’s walls and feed on tissue. In early spring, they detach as third instars and are expelled through the mammal’s feces. Third instar larvae growing in the skin drop from the mammal host after a period of 30 days.

Mature larvae expelled through feces or dropped down from skin in early spring burrow into soil and begin to pupate within two or three days. Pupae do not feed. Instead, they use this time to transform into adults. For a period of one month, the pupae develop adult features, such as wings and antennae. Once fully transformed, sexually mature adult botflies emerge and begin the life cycle over again.

Like pupae, adult botflies do not feed. Newly emerged from their pupal cases, the adult botflies have sensitive antennae to make up for their poor vision. Male and female adults depend on their sensitive antennae to find each other and mate. During summer and fall, adult females seek hosts for their eggs, whether they catch a fly or mosquito and transfer their eggs to them, or directly attach their eggs to warm-blooded mammals such as cattle, rabbits, sheep and horses.

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