298 WESTERN GRAZING GROUNDS AND FOREST RANGES 



seed ticks then began crawling about looking for some 

 animal to which to attach themselves. At the first op- 

 portunity this was done, and they crawled upon the 

 unsuspecting beast and began to develop immediately 

 into good-sized ticks. In from fifteen to twenty days, 

 if the animal is not immune, the disease breaks out. In 

 three weeks the insect grows to adult age, drops off 

 and begins to lay its eggs under some convenient chip 

 or piece of dung, and so the process is repeated in- 

 definitely. 



The ticks may generally be discovered inside the 

 thighs and on the escutcheon and belly where the hide 

 is tender and the hair is short. While most all cattle 

 have ear ticks, and some body ticks, it is not difficult to 

 recognize the true fever tick. 



Place a fever tick upon the hand and if it is full- 

 grown it will be all day crawling across it. An ear 

 tick of the same size will do it in a few minutes. The 

 full-grown female tick is of a slaty blue color, about 

 as large and much the shape of a grain of corn, and 

 with eight legs. The male is smaller, rather triangular 

 in shape and in color a brick-red. The male's legs are 

 much longer than those of the female. The seven- 

 teenth annual report of the Bureau of Animal Industry 

 contains a full and finely illustrated story of the Texas 

 fever tick which should be read by every one interested 

 in the subject. 



Scabies or Mange. This is a cattle disease similar to 

 scab in sheep. The mites, however, are a different 

 variety of the same species, and the sheep mites will 

 not attack cattle nor will cattle mites make a host of 

 sheep. The symptoms are the same in each case. The 

 constant desire to scratch, raw bleeding necks and shoul- 



