Is My Horse a Tick Magnet?

What might cause one horse to have many ticks on him while his pasturemate only has a few?
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Is My Horse a Tick Magnet?
In theory, all horses pastured in the same field should pick up similar numbers of ticks. But once on a horse, the ticks might stay and feed or reject the animal and drop off without a blood meal. | Photo: Thinkstock
Q: I have two geldings, a dark bay and a chestnut, that were turned out together for about two months. When I brought them back to the barn, the dark bay was covered in what seemed like hundreds of deer ticks. The chestnut maybe had five ticks. Why would there be such a difference in tick numbers if they were in the same pasture? –Kelly, Lexington, Kentucky

A: There can be distinct differences in blood-feeding arthropods’ (such as ticks and horse flies) attraction to individual horses. Some differences are inborn among these bugs; others are acquired after previous feeding exposure. Researchers are still learning which factors are important and how to use this knowledge to produce better repellents and protective chemicals for humans, horses, and livestock.

The factors that attract these bloodfeeders vary with the pest. For example, vision is important to horse flies. They see a dark moving shape in the distance and fly toward it. As they get closer, their senses check for other attractions, such as warmth, carbon dioxide, or specific skin odors. Often, dark-colored animals are more susceptible to attack from biting flies than light ones in the same herd because they are easier to see.

Ticks have limited vision so they rely on other senses. Hungry ticks climb vegetation and wait for a passing host. Ground vibrations from animal movement or carbon dioxide indicate a host is approaching. In theory, all horses pastured in the same field should pick up similar numbers of ticks. But once on a horse, the ticks might stay and feed or reject the animal and drop off without a blood meal. Over time, ticks continue to accumulate on “acceptable” animals; few will stay on those that have some sort of resistance mechanism

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Written by:

Lee Townsend, MS, PhD, is an entomologist in the University of Kentucky College of Agriculture.

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