Endovac announces new Chief Veterinary Officer

Endovac announces new Chief Veterinary Officer

Endovac Animal Health is pleased to announce the addition of Dr. Travis
White as Chief Veterinary Officer. Dr. White will lead Endovac’s veterinary services by driving
regulatory compliance, advancing product development and supporting customer success. Skillfully, he
will provide expert technical guidance to producers, veterinarians and Endovac’s internal teams.

Consequently, Dr. White recently relocated to Columbia, Missouri from Malad City, Idaho. Also, he earned his
Bachelor of Science degree in Bioveterinary Science from Utah State University. Then, he earned his Doctor
of Veterinary Medicine degree from Washington State University.  Additionally, Dr. White has over two
decades of veterinary leadership across clinical practice, pharmaceutical technical services and
global consulting.  Also, he has worked with thousands of producers, veterinarians and distribution
partners in 12 countries, providing on-farm consulting, designing research trials and leading
strategic training for sales teams, producers and veterinary continuing education programs.

““Dr. White will be a vital asset to the development and growth of Endovac Animal Health,” says
Endovac President Steve Knorr. “ Additionally, we are thrilled to have a veterinarian of his caliber in our home
office as a part of our core team. His knowledge and background will be integral to taking
Endovac Animal Health to the next level.”

Furthermore, Endovac Animal Health is a proactive animal health company focused on superior science and
smart solutions for today’s producer.  As a result, we value exemplary scientific standards, which show
through our people and products. Additionally, our culture is dedicated to customer-centric integrity and an
animals-first mentality. Located in Columbia, MO, Endovac vaccines are sold throughout the
United States and Canada.

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Managing External Parasites in Cattle

Managing External Parasites in Cattle, The Silent Profit Thieves

When we discuss parasites in cattle, the internal species are typically the first that come to mind. However, external parasites–including but not limited to lice, mites and ticks– can also cause significant animal discomfort and erode your profit margin.

External parasites largely cause issues by impacting animal grazing behavior, increasing stress and, most importantly, transmitting several serious diseases, as noted in a recent Beef Cattle Research Council (BCRC) webinar, The Ins and Outs of Parasite Management, which featured Drs. John Gilleard of the University of Calgary and Carling Matejka of Veterinary Agri-Health Services.

How much is it costing you?

According to Matejka, the economic losses from parasites (both internal and external) are estimated at $8.5 billion annually or $190 per head in the U.S. The top three parasites are any of the gastrointestinal group, ticks and live flukes. Other lesser but no doubt important external parasites include lice, mosquitos, cattle grubs and mites.

As she puts it, parasites are “silent profit thieves.” They impair immune function, decrease reproduction through lower conception rates, and reduce feed efficiency, which impacts live weight and carcass yield, decreases carcass grades and leads to greater greenhouse gas emissions.

What Parasites

Common parasites, like flies, can transmit pink eye and ticks can cause tick paralysis or blood diseases, including anaplasmosis and babesiosis. These insects are powerful vectors that can carry contagions across borders and different operations. For a recent example of this significance, look cattle fever ticks in Texas cited by the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service as “the most dangerous cattle ectoparasites in the United States.” This has led to careful protocols and regional quarantine procedures to prevent the spread.

Cattle of all age ranges can be impacted by external parasites, but we usually see the impact during the growing stages when weight gain is impacted according to Drs. Kateryn Rochon from the University of Manitoba and Shaun Dergousoff from Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada in their BCRC article Parasites-External. Additional impacts such as dams with decreased milk production, a higher disease transmission, anemia and/or damaged hide or meat can also be measured.

“The life cycle of each pest determines when they are active throughout the year. The timing of adult activity overlaps for several types of pests, so producers should be aware of what pests are present in their region. The timing of pest activity can vary throughout the day ,” write coauthors Rochon and Dergousoff.

Because understanding lifecycles are so crucial in good parasite management, there should be a well-grounded familiarity into what these look like for specific regions and how seasonal abnormalities can author them. A lot of extension services have excellent visual materials for the reference of you and your team.

Symptoms and Treatments

Common signs associated with external parasites are often quite obvious and include itching, hair loss, overall stress, changes in grazing behavior, and production losses. Before beginning any treatment, it’s essential to confirm that parasites are indeed the cause—many factors can lead to symptoms like hair loss or weight loss, and close-up visual inspection is often required for proper verification.

Dr. Gilleard emphasized that, as with internal parasites, the goal with external parasites should not be complete elimination but sustainable management. He pointed out that the industry currently takes a “treat-first” approach to parasite control, when instead, producers should adopt an “assess-first” mindset. Integrated pest management, or IPM, is one strategy that supports this shift. It combines preventative measures to keep parasite populations below economically damaging levels and uses targeted treatments only when needed.

IPM strategies encourage producers to accurately identify the pest species, understand its life cycle, and assess the severity of the problem before selecting control options. This might include monitoring animal behavior, using traps, visually inspecting livestock, or surveying pastures and barns for breeding grounds. Recordkeeping is also key. Maintaining logs with details of the product use by year and season can help evaluate what works in the past and guide future treatment choices.

Matejka outlined several recommended steps for managing infestations—ideally in consultation with a qualified veterinarian.

  • Identify the Pest: Accurate identification is critical for selecting the most effective treatment
  • Develop a Treatment Plan: Tailor strategies to the specific pest and infestation level.
  • Implement Treatment: Rotate insecticide classes annually to reduce resistance risk and apply follow-up treatments as necessary.
  • Reduce Risk Factors: Avoid overcrowding, manage manure and water carefully, and implement fly control in barns or other structures.
  • Evaluate Treatment Effectiveness: Monitor results and adjust as needed to ensure long-term control.

Ultimately, successful external parasite control comes down to good assessment, strategic planning, and long-term monitoring, rather than aiming for complete eradication. IPM helps producers make thoughtful, sustainable decisions that protect animal health and farm
profitability.

By Jaclyn Krymowski for American Cattlemen.

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Here is an article focusing managing external parasites

Pasture Management For Cool-Season Grasses

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NCBA Pushes for Sterile Fly Facility

NCBA Pushes for Domestic Sterile Fly Facility to Eradicate New World Screwworm

WASHINGTON (May 14, 2025) – As the threat posed by the New World screwworm rises, NCBA today joined affiliate state associations in urging Congress to pass the STOP Screwworms Act to fund the opening of a new sterile fly facility in the United States. Introduced by Rep. Tony Gonzales (R-TX) and Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX), this bill would help protect both livestock and human health from the New World screwworm.

“When I was growing up, I heard the stories of how damaging the New World screwworm was to our cattle before it was eradicated in the 1960s. I never want to see that kind of devastation return to our country,” said NCBA President Buck Wehrbein, a Nebraska cattleman. “That is why the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association is supporting the STOP Screwworms Act so we can construct a sterile fly facility in the United States that will help us prevent this pest from ever returning to our country.”

Sterile Insect Technique

Due to the New World screwworm’s continued push north, the urgency to create a new sterile fly facility in the United States has increased. NCBA supported the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s decision to close the southern border to shipments of cattle, horses, and bison to protect American agriculture, but the long-term strategy to eradicate the screwworm from North America requires the use of sterile insect technique.

Under sterile insect technique, millions of sterile flies are released into the environment where they breed with wild flies, ultimately creating no new offspring. The United States spent millions of dollars to successfully eradicate screwworms from North America back in the 1960s using this method, but once the threat was mitigated, most sterile fly production facilities shut down. Today, only one facility is still active in Panama, but it cannot produce enough sterile flies to fully prevent the New World screwworm from spreading through Mexico and eventually reaching America’s southern border.

The Facility

“To protect American agriculture, NCBA strongly supports the creation of a new sterile fly facility within the United States,” said NCBA Senior Vice President of Government Affairs Ethan Lane. “We also appreciate the hard work of NCBA state affiliates in ensuring that members of Congress closest to the southern border understand the severity of this threat.”

In addition to NCBA, this legislation is supported by Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association (TSCRA). NCBA and TSCRA are also working with numerous lawmakers to secure additional financial resources to combat the New World screwworm.

“Texas will be among the first impacted by the New World screwworm, making domestic sterile fly infrastructure critical,” said TSCRA President Carl Ray Polk Jr. “We’re grateful to Sen. Cornyn and Rep. Gonzales for acting quickly and ensuring this threat is taken seriously in Washington.”

Click here for more information:https://www.ncba.org/

May 2024

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New World Screwworm Threat

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