Screwworm Information
New World screwworm (NWS) is a serious pest of livestock and wildlife.
This invasive pest we previously eradicated from the United States, but has recently been reintroduced (June 2026). Website links below provide information on screwworm, including prevention and treatment for screwworm. Treatment and prevention, as well as reporting requirements, often vary by state - contact animal health officials in your state for state-specific requirements and recommendations.
FEDERAL RESOURCES
STATE RESOURCES
-
California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA)
-
University of California at Riverside
-
Florida Department of Agriculture & Consumer Services
-
Texas Animal Health Commission
-
Texas A&M Agrilife Extension
-
New Mexico State University
-
University of Tennessee
COMMODITY GROUP RESOURCES
-
AVMA
-
NCBA
-
Swine Health Information Center
-
American Sheep Industry Association
Stable Fly
The stable fly is one of the most serious pests of confined livestock. In many areas it is becoming a more serious pest of pastured cattle as well, associated with hay waste residues from the large, round hay bales fed in pastures. Adult stable flies of both sexes require frequent blood meals (often daily) and feed preferentially on the lower body and legs of cattle. Stable flies have long bayonet-type mouthparts called a proboscis, which they use to tear through the skin causing blood to pool at the skin surface. These bites can be quite painful.
Stable flies have very poor survival at temperatures above 86 ºF (30 ºC), thus limiting their activity during hotter summer periods in geographic locations where mid-summer mean maximum temperatures substantially exceed this threshold. Stable flies are considered to be more abundant during high rainfall years, presumably due to the widespread increase in available immature habitat. Recent studies in California have shown that stable fly biting intensity during late spring and early summer was related to March rainfall, with greater rainfall in March resulting in greater abundance of stable flies during the peak abundance period in late spring and early summer (late April-June).








