PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

An economic evaluation of cattle tick acaricide-resistances and the financial losses in subtropical dairy farms of Ecuador: A farm system approach

  • Valeria Paucar-Quishpe,
  • Ximena Pérez-Otáñez,
  • Richar Rodríguez-Hidalgo,
  • Darío Cepeda-Bastidas,
  • Cecilia Pérez-Escalante,
  • Jorge Grijalva-Olmedo,
  • Sandra Enríquez,
  • Susana Arciniegas-Ortega,
  • Luis Sandoval-Trávez,
  • Bryan Benavides-Erazo,
  • Sophie O. Vanwambeke,
  • Claude Saegerman,
  • Lenin Ron-Garrido

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 6

Abstract

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Estimates of economic losses in cattle due to tick infestations in subtropical areas are limited, such as in Ecuador. Ticks affect animal production and health, but those direct effects are difficult to estimate since financial exercises carried out in farms consider both costs of the inputs and revenues. This study aims to quantify the costs of inputs involved in milk production and to know the role of acaricide treatment in the production costs on dairy farms in subtropical zones using a farming system approach. Regression and classification trees were used to study the relationship between tick control, acaricide resistance and the presence of high level of tick infestation in the farm system. Even though there was no significant direct association between high levels of tick infestation and the presence of acaricide resistance in ticks, a more complex structure for resistances operates in the manifestation of high tick infestation involving levels of farm technology and no acaricide resistance. Farms with higher levels of technology allocate a lower percentage of sanitary expenses to control ticks (13.41%) in comparison to semi-technified (23.97%) and non-technified farms (32.49%). Likewise, more technified and bigger herds have a lower annual expenditure on acaricide treatment (1.30% of the production budget equivalent to 8.46 USD per animal) compared to non-technified farms where it can represent more than 2.74% of the production budget and where the absence of cypermethrin resistance increases the treatment cost to 19.50 USS per animal annually. These results can motivate the development of information campaigns and control programmes targeted to the reality of small and medium farms that are the most affected in terms of the money they invest in controlling ticks.