Other Worm Control Practices for Horses

Control parasites with clean pasture.
Control parasites with clean pasture. Flickr.com - Smerikal

Recently Horsemen's Laboratory was asked what other practices an owner can use to control worms in addition to deworming, especially for the worms that cause summer sores (Habronema).

Controlling parasites in your horse

Controlling parasites in your horse

What other practices can a horse owner use to control worms in addition to deworming, especially for the Habronema worms that cause summer sores.

Since Habronema larvae are spread by stable flies and house flies, the best practice to help control them is to control the fly population in your horses' environment. The Habronema larvae are passed in horse manure, when flies feed on the manure they actually take in the microscopic larvae.

These larvae develop and when the flies feed on a horse's wound or around the eyes, lips or other areas of the horse that are moist the larvae moves to the mouth parts of the fly then they get into the small wound that the fly makes as it feeds on the horse and burrow in to the tissue of the horse.

Fly larvae (maggots) may also eat the Habronema larvae which will live in the fly until the fly becomes an adult. Once in the tissue it is thought the larvae causes considerable inflammation.

Some believe that there is a severe allergic local reaction to the larvae that causes the severe inflammation that creates a deep ugly ulcer from ¼ inch to several inches in diameter. Some owners claim the fly predators help reduce the fly population a great deal around the stable.

Other worms and practices that help control them:

Pick up manure in stalls, paddocks and pastures as often as possible.

  • Stalls at least every day and if possible 2 times a day.
  • Paddocks at least 1 time a day.
  • Pastures at least 2 times a week, best if more often in warm moist climates.

Be sure it is going to be hot and dry for several days when you mow or drag pastures and best to pick up manure before mowing or dragging.

One should also strongly consider keeping horses off the pasture for 2-4 weeks. Since mowing and dragging pastures spreads the infective eggs and larvae over a much larger portion of pasture area making it hard for the horses to avoid eating them.

  • Do not turn new horses into pastures before getting a fecal egg count processed.
  • Do a fecal egg count after deworming before turning a new horse into your herd of horses to be sure there are not any adult worms still in the digestive tract producing eggs.
  • Do periodic fecal egg counts to determine if the horse is a low, medium, or high shedder of worm eggs.
  • Do periodic fecal egg counts to determine which horses and when they need to be dewormed.

Cleaning pastures at first sounds like a big task, however, most horses seem to divide pastures into two distinct areas; lawns and roughs. There are also pasture vacuums now available to be pulled behind a tractor that will actually vacuum your pastures.

  • Lawns are where the horses eat.
  • Roughs are where horses pass their manure.

Once the lawn and rough areas have been established you most likely will only have to pick up the rough area, as 90% of the worm eggs will be passed in those areas.

Strongyle larvae general take 2-3 days (in the summer under ideal conditions 24 hours) to reach the infective stage and they do not leave the pile of manure they were passed in until they reach the infective stage.

Following the routine we have described for keeping stalls, paddocks, and pastures cleaned will have a very positive affect on reducing the number of infective eggs and larvae that your horses are exposed to. As opposed to deworming that only kills the worms that are adults.

In conclusion, picking up the manure piles on a routine schedule will reduce your horses' exposure to a much higher number of worms than deworming.

However, deworming is still an essential part of worm control. Therefore, following all the recommendations above will greatly reduce your horses' risks of problems caused by worms that we described in an earlier article.

By Dr. John Byrd

About the Author

Flossie Sellers

Author picture

As an animal lover since childhood, Flossie was delighted when Mark, the CEO and developer of EquiMed asked her to join his team of contributors.

She enrolled in My Horse University at Michigan State and completed a number of courses in everything related to horse health, nutrition, diseases and conditions, medications, hoof and dental care, barn safety, and first aid.

Staying up-to-date on the latest developments in horse care and equine health is now a habit, and she enjoys sharing a wealth of information with horse owners everywhere.

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