• Home
  • About Us
    • History
  • Posts
  • Support Us
  • Volunteer
  • Shop
  • About Prairie Dogs
  • #0 (no title)
  • Contact Us
  • #0 (no title)

Prairie Dog Pals

Dedicated to the Preservation of Prairie Dogs and their Habitat

SEASON OF DELTAMETHRIN APPLICATION AFFECTS FLEA AND PLAGUE CONTROL IN WHITE-TAILED PRAIRIE DOG (CYNOMYS LEUCURUS) COLONIES, COLORADO, USA.

May 5, 2018 by PDP

LinkedIn0
Twitter0
Facebook0
Google+0
https://prairiedogpals.org/hookup-apps-free/

Abstract

In 2008 and 2009, we evaluated the duration of prophylactic deltamethrin treatments in white-tailed prairie dog ( Cynomys leucurus ) colonies and compared effects of autumn or spring dust application in suppressing flea numbers and plague. Plague occurred before and during our experiment. Overall, flea abundance tended to increase from May or June to September, but it was affected by deltamethrin treatment and plague dynamics. Success in trapping prairie dogs (animals caught/trap days) declined between June and September at all study sites. However, by September trap success on dusted sites (19%; 95% confidence interval [CI] 16-22%) was about 15-fold greater than on undusted control sites (1%; CI 0.3-4%; P≤0.0001). Applying deltamethrin dust as early as 12 mo prior seemed to afford some protection to prairie dogs. Our data showed that dusting even a portion of a prairie dog colony can prolong its persistence despite epizootic plague. Autumn dusting may offer advantages over spring in suppressing overwinter or early-spring flea activity, but timing should be adjusted to precede the annual decline in aboveground activity for hibernating prairie dog species. Large colony complexes or collections of occupied but fragmented habitat may benefit from dusting some sites in spring and others in autumn to maximize flea suppression in a portion of the complex or habitat year-round.

Read more:  sites like doublelist

seeking threesomes
Print Friendly

News Tagged: plague

Recent News

Understanding the interconnection of life on planet earth!

July 14, 2023 By PDP

Lena Hakim was given permission by Dr. Brian Miller (PhD professor at Highlands University located in Las Vegas, NM) to convert his class notes into an educational booklet about our modern environmental issues. Please share widely. Dr. Miller has published over 40 peer-reviewed papers on prairie dogs, and is considered one of the world’s leading […]

Resources for Landowners: financial incentives and non-lethal tools for living with prairie dogs.

July 12, 2023 By PDP

Here is a very fine publication from the Prairie Coalition on Resources for Landowners: financial incentives and non-lethal tools for living with prairie dogs. Here is the link: Link to Publication  

Prairie Dogs: The most important animals in New Mexico!

July 6, 2023 By PDP

PLEASE look at  the attached booklet!  PLEASE pass  it on.  PLEASE consider joining Lena for the next legislative session  to  protect this  native species important to our western environment!!! This booklet is being offered to you by New Mexico Sustainably Green, a nonprofit publishing platform designed to provide free and/or affordable environmental educational materials for […]

Blogroll

  • Agenda
  • Agenda
  • Meeting Agenda

Links

  • Albuquerque Pet Memorial Service
  • Animal Protection New Mexico
  • Animal Protection Voters
  • Bosque Farm Relocation Project
  • Great Plains Restoration Council
  • Midwest Prairie Dog Shelter
  • New Mexico House Rabbit Society
  • New Mexico Wilderness Alliance
  • Pathways: Wildlife Corridors of NM
  • Prairie Dog Coalition
  • Southwest Veterinary Medical Center
  • VCA Veterinary Hospital
  • Wild Earth Guardians

© Copyright 2015 PrairieDogPals.org | Help a Prairie Dog Today!