Will treating cattle with insecticide protect them from tsetse and trypanosomiasis?
The insecticides applied to cattle to control tsetse are not repellents (Baylis et al., 1994; Vale et al., 1999). Consequently, they do not prevent directly tsetse from biting cattle . However, each fly that bites – or even touches – a treated animal will die within a few hours. Hence, if enough cattle are treated then the population of tsetse will be reduced, cattle will be bitten less and the incidence of trypanosomiasis will decrease. Ultimately, if there are no tsetse in an area, then there will be no trypanosomiasis. The first upshot of this is that at the beginning of a control operation, animals will continue to be infected with trypanosomiasis. An obvious decrease in disease incidence will only occur after a few months, when the number of tsetse has declined. Second, cattle at the edge of a control operation that is near a tsetse-infested area, will be continuously infected by tsetse invading the controlled area. To prevent this, it may be necessary to use a protective barrier