Efficacy of fluralaner solution administered to egg layer chickens through drinking water for control of northern fowl mite (Ornithonyssus sylviarum)
Alec C. Gerry, Bradley A. Mullens, Levi Zahn, Faris Jirjis, Amy C. Murillo, Caleb B. Hubbard, Zikun Wang

TL;DR
This study shows that fluralaner administered in drinking water effectively controls northern fowl mites in chickens with no adverse effects.
Contribution
The study confirms the efficacy of fluralaner administered via drinking water for northern fowl mite control in chickens.
Findings
Fluralaner reduced mite counts by over 96% in layer chickens within two days of treatment.
Control efficacy exceeded 99% from day 8 to day 28 in both laboratory and field studies.
No adverse health effects were observed in chickens treated with fluralaner.
Abstract
The northern fowl mite (NFM), Ornithonyssus sylviarum, is one of the most important external parasites of commercial poultry in the USA. NFM feeds on blood, causing irritation and stress to infested birds and potentially reducing egg production in flocks with high levels of mite infestation. Fluralaner is a systemically active insecticide and acaricide. We report on two studies that evaluated the efficacy of fluralaner administered to layer chickens in medicated drinking water through two single doses of 0.5 mg fluralaner per kg chicken body weight at 7 days apart for control of NFM. In two separate studies, white Leghorn chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) were exposed to NFM so that they developed mite infestations. The first study was a dose confirmation study (n = 64 pullet birds per treatment group). The second study was a field efficacy study (n = 400 layer birds per treatment…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBird parasitology and diseases · Insects and Parasite Interactions · Dermatological diseases and infestations
