By: Lee Townsend, Extension Entomologist
University of Kentucky College of Agriculture
House flies and stable flies
are common pests around horse barns, stables, and corrals. Persistent
house flies are very annoying and potential carriers of human and animal
pathogens. Stable flies give painful bites making activities unpleasant
for humans and making horses nervous and difficult to manage.
House flies visit most any
moist material from manure and decaying organic matter to garbage to blot up a
liquid meal with their sponging mouthparts. They can carry a range of
pathogens for such things as intestinal disorders and eye infections on their
restless journeys. Females may deposit batches of eggs as they feed on a
variety of moist, fermenting organic matter, manure, rotting hay, feed silage,
or garbage. The cycle from egg to adult takes from 7 to 14 days,
depending on environmental conditions. Mature larvae will crawl to drier
sites to pupate and emerge as adults.
The stable fly resembles a
house fly but has a distinct piercing mouthpart that projects from the front of
its head. Males and females are blood feeders, usually attacking the
flanks or below the knee causing horses to stamp or kick themselves. The
fly is on the animal for only a few minutes; after feeding it moves to walls,
fences, or other surfaces to digest its meal. Stable fly maggots develop
in decaying organic matter. A fermenting mixture of straw, spilled feed,
or hay, and urine or water is ideal. Horse manure is usually too dry but
becomes suitable if moistened. Females lay several batches of 40 to 80 eggs.
Development from egg to adult takes 21 to 25 days during the summer.
House flies and stable flies
need breeding material, moisture, and warmth to develop. A successful fly
control program must rely on timely elimination of breeding sites and moisture
control. Insecticides can help to provide some temporary reduction of
house fly and stable fly populations but cannot be the basis of effective fly
management.
Elimination of breeding site
is the key to a successful fly control program. Barns and corrals should
be cleaned once a week to break fly life cycles. Removed manure and other
fly breeding materials should be spread thinly over an appropriate area or
composted, if practical.
Maintain good drainage to
eliminate wet manure, spilled feed, and hay or straw. Check for and
correct wet areas around animal waterers. Dry manure and accumulated
organic matter are not good breeding sites.
Mechanical Control
·
Screening is an excellent way to
keep flies out of feed and tack rooms and box stalls
·
Fans that direct a downward and
outward air flow will keep flies from entering barns.
·
Fly traps and sticky paper will
capture flies. They may be most useful
as a means of documenting fly numbers over time. A significant increase in catch from one week
to the next can be a warning to check on sanitation and to increase fly control
measures.
·
Several commercial firms offer a fly
parasite (predator) release program that can be used to supplement fly control.
Insecticides as Supplements to Fly Control
Insecticides are used to kill adult flies after a problem has
developed. While they can help to reduce fly numbers, they do not address
their source – moist breeding materials. There are many alternatives for
fly control but they should be viewed as a temporary solution until the root
cause of the problem can be corrected. Large numbers of flies mean lots
of breeding sites and a situation that cannot be corrected by insecticides
alone.
Residual insecticides are applied to walls, ceilings, and rafters of barns and
sheds where flies rest. General observations and accumulations of fly
specks (waste drops) will help to identify these spots. Be sure to
protect water and feed when making applications. In order to minimize
control failures due to insecticide resistance, do not apply the same
insecticide or insecticide within he same chemical class repeatedly throughout
an entire season.
Class
|
Brand Name
|
Precautions and Remarks
|
Cyromazine
|
Neporex
|
Spray
or dry application to stall bedding or muck pile
|
Solitude
IGR
|
In feed
to control fly larvae in manure
|
|
Spinosad
|
Elector
|
Spray
to runoff: 1 gallon per 500 to 1,000 square feet. Horses may be present when applied. Do not use more than once each week. Do not make more than 5 consecutive
applications
|
CAUTION: ALWAYS READ AND FOLLOW LABEL DIRECTIONS FOR
SAFE USE OF ANY PESTICIDE!
Homemade Horse Fly Spray Recipe:
·
2 cups White Vinegar
·
1 tablespoon Eucalyptus Oil
·
1 cup Water
·
Directions: Mix the ingredients together well in a spray bottle -
always shake well before every use – and spray the horse
Results: Effective protection for about 45 minutes to 1 hour.
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