New Threat from the Screw Worm only 400 miles south of Texas and moving north

puma guy

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Texas eliminated the screw worm back in the 1960's which allows Texas Whitetail deer populations to not only grow but explode in some areas. Back then I was selling guns and the quality of buck deer was pitiful. I heard stories of hunters using files to make a split on the tip of a spikes antler since a legally harvested buck had to have forked tines, no spike deer were allowed. Now another plague of screw worm threatens not only our deer population, but of course cattle. The effort to eradicate them back in the '60's was actually due to the decimating effect on cattle. Here is an article I received from The Texas Flyover.
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Screwworm Within 400 Miles of Texas


The parasitic New World screwworm has been reported less than 400 miles from McAllen, raising alarms that it could spread to Texas in as little as four months.
On Monday, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn told his colleagues that a screwworm outbreak could cost Texas livestock producers up to $1 billion and the general economy $3.7 billion. Consumers would likely see even higher beef prices.

Treatment remedies for infected cattle have jumped in price, prompting some Mexican ranchers to resort to pouring gasoline on their livestock to kill the larvae. An infection can kill a cow within a week. The screwworm also poses a threat to wildlife and has infected humans on occasion.

The federal government is building a facility for the production of sterile male flies at the former Moore Air Base in Hidalgo County and funding the expansion of a similar facility in Mexico. In May, the Screwworm Coalition of Texas was organized to provide information about efforts to combat the parasite's spread.
 
I remember an outbreak in 1973.The flies lay their eggs in open wounds,when they hatch,the larvae start eating the flesh.They would lay their eggs on the umbilical cord on newborn calves and the larvae would eat their way into the navel cavity.I remember we would have to catch baby calves that we would see with bloody navels,clean out the larvae and treat the navel area with a salve that would help heal the wound and help repel the flies.During the eradication,they dropped from a plane, small paper boxes filled with sterile male flies,that were designed to break open when they hit the ground,to release the flies.
 
Texas eliminated the screw worm back in the 1960's which allows Texas Whitetail deer populations to not only grow but explode in some areas. Back then I was selling guns and the quality of buck deer was pitiful. I heard stories of hunters using files to make a split on the tip of a spikes antler since a legally harvested buck had to have forked tines, no spike deer were allowed. Now another plague of screw worm threatens not only our deer population, but of course cattle. The effort to eradicate them back in the '60's was actually due to the decimating effect on cattle. Here is an article I received from The Texas Flyover.
"
Article Icon 1
Screwworm Within 400 Miles of Texas


The parasitic New World screwworm has been reported less than 400 miles from McAllen, raising alarms that it could spread to Texas in as little as four months.
On Monday, U.S. Sen. John Cornyn told his colleagues that a screwworm outbreak could cost Texas livestock producers up to $1 billion and the general economy $3.7 billion. Consumers would likely see even higher beef prices.

Treatment remedies for infected cattle have jumped in price, prompting some Mexican ranchers to resort to pouring gasoline on their livestock to kill the larvae. An infection can kill a cow within a week. The screwworm also poses a threat to wildlife and has infected humans on occasion.

The federal government is building a facility for the production of sterile male flies at the former Moore Air Base in Hidalgo County and funding the expansion of a similar facility in Mexico. In May, the Screwworm Coalition of Texas was organized to provide information about efforts to combat the parasite's spread.
Dang, that's some wild history right there. With the screw worm threat creeping up again and talk of billions lost, do y'all reckon Texas ranchers and hunters are better prepared this go-round than back in the '60s?
 
We dealt with them on a monthly basis it seemed in the late Forties and early Fifties. It was exactly as MikeR described, and they eliminated them around the middle Fifties. I don’t remember an outbreak in the Seventies but we had sold the dairy by then and I was no longer around cows. Thank YOU LORD !
 

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