Stopping Flies in 2025: Tips to Battle These Economic Pests

K-State Entomologist Cassandra Olds shares strategies for good fly control.

Stopping-Flies-in-2025_Stable-and-Horn-Flies.jpg
Horn flies are smaller flies, found predominantly on the back and belly of the animal while the larger stable fly is found on the legs, especially front pair.
(Cassandra Olds, Kansas State University)

With warming weather and cattle going out onto pasture soon, now is the time to consider fly control options.

“Every year, stable and horn flies cause significant economic losses, but a good fly control program can minimize this impact,” says Cassandra Olds, Kansas State University Extension entomologist, in a recent “K-State Beef Tips” article. “Although often grouped together, these are very different flies that need different control approaches.”

Olds shares these tips to stopping flies, or at least reducing their impact this year:

Step 1: Knowing what you have
“The first step in developing a good fly control program is knowing who you have,” Olds explains.

Horn flies feed 20 to 30 times a day and stay associated with their chosen animal 24/7, with females only leaving briefly to lay eggs. Stable flies in contrast only feed once or twice a day, remaining on the host for a short period of time (3 to 5 minutes).

When not feeding, flies are resting in shaded areas such as building sides and vegetation. This short feeding time means producers often underestimate their stable fly burdens.

While both flies affect pastured cattle, horn flies are not a problem in confined settings such as dairies and feedlots. This is because horn flies need fresh, undisturbed manure as a breeding site while stable flies can develop in any decaying plant matter such as hay bales, feed bunk spill over and decaying grass.

Step 2: Reduce populations
Olds explains with either fly species, using non-insecticidal control methods are essential for slowing insecticide resistance. For horn flies, pasture burning in spring kills any flies overwintering, which can significantly reduce fly populations emerging as weather warms. A healthy dung beetle population will also significantly reduce your fly numbers for free.

“Dung beetles are very susceptible to macrocyclic lactones so avoid using injectable and pour on avermectins (abamectin, eprinomectin, ivermectin etc.),” Olds says.

Because horn flies die within hours of being removed from cattle, non-chemical walk-through traps can be effective if animals pass through it regularly.

Step 3: Eliminate breeding grounds
Round hay bales result in significant wastage, which when mixed into the manure contaminated mud around bales provides a prime breeding site for stable flies.

Olds explains each round bale can produce 200,000 stable flies.

“Reducing hay waste and spreading/drying areas around finished bales is key to reducing stable fly numbers,” she says. “In feedlots, minimizing feed spillage and waste is critical to remove breeding sites for stable and house flies.”

Parasitoid wasps are available from multiple sellers and should be released around fly breeding sites. These are very effective if released before fly populations emerge and released repeatedly though the fly season.

Be careful using insecticides if using parasitoid wasps as they are very small and sensitive to these chemicals. Keeping vegetation surrounding pen areas short and exposed will remove sheltered resting areas, making life more difficult for the flies.

Step 4: Consider chemical control options
Olds stresses chemical control options should be used as a supplement not the basis of a fly control program.

Stopping Flies in 2025_Tips for Battling These Economic Pests.jpg

“For horn flies, insecticidal ear tags are an effective method of control if correct rotation is used,” she adds. “Rotate the chemical class of your tag annually, in year one using pyrethroid-based products, year two use organophosphate-based products and year three use macrocyclic lactone tags. Repeating this three-year cycle will reduce the selection pressure on the fly populations, slowing down the spread of resistance.”

Olds also shares these tips for effective tagging.

“Tag both ears and place the tag directly into the ear,” she explains. “For the tag to be effective, it must come into direct contact with the animal’s skin, which is greatly reduced when daisy chained.”

Daisychainedtags.png
Little of the tag touches the body when attached to another tag.
(Cassandra Olds, Kansas State University)

Olds also instructs producers not to tag young calves and adds mature bulls with thick necks might not benefit from tagging unless the tag can touch the skin.

“Although the box may label products as effective for four to five months, field trials have shown that tags only remain effective for 90 to 100 days,” Olds says. “If possible, wait until fly populations are noticeable before tagging animals to get control over peak fly activity period. After 90 days, remove the tag to reduce the risk of insecticide resistance developing.”

To increase coverage, pour-ons of the same chemical class as the ear tag can be used to increase coverage.

“Be aware that a macrocyclic lactone pour-on will impact dung beetle populations,” Olds says. “Make sure animals are dosed accurately according to weight and ensure head to tail coverage. Due to their low contact time with the host and preference for the legs, topical insecticidal treatments are generally not useful against stable flies.”

Spraying the legs can provide some relief, although it should be used sparingly as most sprays are pyrethroid based, not allowing for effective annual rotation. Baits and premise sprays can be useful in controlling both house and stable flies, look for areas where flies are found resting such as building walls, fence posts and inside sheds and shelters.

Another option is feed through insect growth regulators (IGRs) to control horn fly. Olds says it is important cattle consume the correct amount, which can be difficult under free-choice conditions.

“Under-dosing will result in resistance developing over time, reducing product efficacy,” she says. “Although labeled for stable fly control also, when manure containing the IGR is diluted in the mud and hay, it is no longer effective.”

Often marketed as dung beetle safe, Olds says evaluations of these claims in most species have not been carried out, and their true impact remains unknown.

“Insecticide resistance to IGRs can and does happen; to slow this, rotate annually between Methoprene-based (Group 7A) and diflubenzuron-based products (group 15),” she adds.

The Veterinary Entomology website provides a searchable database that can help producers select the right products. Producers can select from type of animal, insect and application method.

The Insecticide Resistance Action Committee (IRAC) codes are given for each product in addition to trade names.

“For on-animal use, select the best product to allow an annual rotation between pyrethroid (Group 3A), organophosphate (Group 1B) and macrocyclic lactone (Group 6) groups,” Olds says.

Your next read: Take a Two-Pronged Approach to Fly Season Control

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