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CES Medicina Veterinaria y Zootecnia

On-line version ISSN 1900-9607

Abstract

GOMEZ BELTRAN, David Alberto  and  VILLAR, David. Side effects of ivermectin use in livestock: dung community in Colombia. Ces. Med. Vet. Zootec. [online]. 2022, vol.17, n.1, pp.58-77.  Epub Sep 20, 2022. ISSN 1900-9607.  https://doi.org/10.21615/cesmvz.6591.

Ivermectin (IVM) has been the world most widely used antiparasitic agent in veterinary medicine since it came to the market in 1981. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in its risk assessment determined that, although it is very toxic to aquatic organisms, it is unlikely to contaminate water courses from current applications registered for animal use. However, the effects of IVM on non-target invertebrate fauna can have great impact on grassland ecology due to the costs associated with the presence of undegraded dung. In fact, the economic losses from lowering the quality of pastures and reducing the area of pasture available and palatable to livestock have been estimated in $380 million for the American economy. Ivermectin affects a highly beneficial and taxonomically diverse group that inhabits dung, including dung flies, parasitic wasps, and coprophilus and predatory dung beetles. Some studies show that dung from IVM-treated animals can remain in pasture without appreciable signs of degradation for up to 340 days, while those from untreated animals are almost completely degraded after 80 days. In addition, field and laboratory studies have shown the susceptibility of many insects to occur at concentrations well below those excreted in the feces of cattle treated with IVM. Effects on reproduction and development of coleopteran larvae occur at concentrations that can be 10 times lower of those causing mortality. In Colombia, at least 68 species of the subfamily Scarabaeinae have been identified in dung communities. The greater diversity of dung beetles has been associated with forests and silvopastoral systems that incorporate native trees and provide favorable habitats for their survival.

Keywords : Colombia; dung beetles; ivermectin.

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