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anaplasmosis
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<blockquote data-quote="pdfangus" data-source="post: 1594936" data-attributes="member: 6543"><p>I have long maintained that a transmission device in addition to ticks is the big black, as the horse folks call them, B52 horse flies...they fly from animal to animal and are very aggressive blood feeders...</p><p>everyone tells me I am full of hockey....but these things are strong enough fliers to bring the disease from a distance away....</p><p>When I was an undergrad and we studied Anaplasmosis in diseases I recall being told that unless I went to Texas or points south I would never see it. Five years later I found dead cows and aborted calves one </p><p>September morning in central Virginia...vet diagnosed it pretty quickly and we treated 200 cows...never had a tick problem but those big black horse flies were brutal that year...</p><p>anaplasmosis is now a common disease in this part of Virginia</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pdfangus, post: 1594936, member: 6543"] I have long maintained that a transmission device in addition to ticks is the big black, as the horse folks call them, B52 horse flies...they fly from animal to animal and are very aggressive blood feeders... everyone tells me I am full of hockey....but these things are strong enough fliers to bring the disease from a distance away.... When I was an undergrad and we studied Anaplasmosis in diseases I recall being told that unless I went to Texas or points south I would never see it. Five years later I found dead cows and aborted calves one September morning in central Virginia...vet diagnosed it pretty quickly and we treated 200 cows...never had a tick problem but those big black horse flies were brutal that year... anaplasmosis is now a common disease in this part of Virginia [/QUOTE]
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