Sheep keds are wingless flies that resemble
ticks. Keds
spend their entire life cycle on sheep, transferring to lambs by animal
contact. The female deposits a
fully-developed larva on a wool strand.
A red puparium (case) forms around the
larva. A fully-developed sheep ked
emerges from the puparium after about 21 days. Sheep keds feed on
the blood of sheep. Numbers
increase in the winter and decline in the summer.
Sheep keds have been reported to cause a 2 lb. reduction in carcass weight, a 20% reduction in clean, dry weight of fleece and a 7% loss in clean fiber. Heavily-infested sheep itch and have a dirty unthrifty appearance. The feeding by the ked causes firm, hard nodules to develop in the grain layer of the sheepskin. This causes a defect in the skin known as “Cockle”, which reduces the value of the skin because of a decrease in tinsel strength of the leather.
Several insecticides are available, which provide good control of sheep
ked. Perhaps the best time to treat
sheep for keds is right after shearing. If lambs are infested, they should be treated
also, and any replacement animals should be treated before they are brought
into the flock.
Categories: Livestock insects, Sheep, Goats, Sheep keds
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