Ear mites

VickieB

Loving the herd life
Joined
Apr 19, 2013
Messages
307
Reaction score
60
Points
103
Location
Oklahoma
When I got my rabbits I found that one had ear mites. I treated her twice with mineral oil. A couple of months later I found not only did she have them, but so did my other breeders. This time I bought some Ivermectin to treat them with. I gave the first treatment late in mid-July and then 3 weeks later (on Aug. 9) a second treatment. I've notice the buns have them again. I have one rabbit due to kindle tomorrow, another rabbit 2 weeks pregnant, and another just bred. How hard is this on fetuses? I want to treat them all, but am worried how it will affect the unborn buns.
 

sawfish99

Loving the herd life
Joined
Aug 31, 2011
Messages
575
Reaction score
26
Points
173
Location
Griswold, CT
Vickie - we don't give any meds to our does when pregnant unless it is life threatening.

Your rabbits are clearly getting the mites back from another source. Are you completely cleaning the cages and remove/replacing all hay when treating the rabbits? I would spray down the cage (without the rabbit) with a bleach or vinegar solution to help clean it.

Are there any other animals that could possibly be transferring the mites back to the rabbits?
 

VickieB

Loving the herd life
Joined
Apr 19, 2013
Messages
307
Reaction score
60
Points
103
Location
Oklahoma
I don't keep hay in the cages. They get some alfalfa as a treat like once every couple of weeks, but that is it. The cages are all wire, so I was under the impression they wouldn't need to be cleaned; the trays are cleaned daily. I'll try spraying the cages and cleaning them this weekend. This would be a good time because I don't have that many babies growing out right now.
 

Southern by choice

Herd Master
Joined
Jun 11, 2012
Messages
13,336
Reaction score
14,686
Points
613
Location
North Carolina
The ivermectin that you used... was it a topical preparation? Psoroptes Cuniculi is a surface dwelling mite, it is not a burrowing mite.
In goats Permethrin or "frontline"(fiprinol) is used. I don't know if those products are safe for rabbits though. Ususally you want treatments 10 days - 14 days apart.
 

VickieB

Loving the herd life
Joined
Apr 19, 2013
Messages
307
Reaction score
60
Points
103
Location
Oklahoma
It was topical. I put 4 drops on the back of the neck as was suggested, then repeated the treatment 3 weeks later. It cleared it up within days. But now I'm seeing it come back.
 

treeclimber233

Loving the herd life
Joined
Jan 12, 2010
Messages
542
Reaction score
25
Points
111
When I had rabbits I used regular cooking oil. You must make sure the oil goes deeeeep into the ear canal. Put the oil in the ear without letting the rabbit shake its head --- then massage the base of the ear to get any air out of the bottom. Then repeat in 8-10 days. Maybe retreat again in 8-10 days. That treatment will not hurt the babies. Sounds like you are not getting all of the mites that are deep in the ear canal or some eggs are surviving and starting up again. I think mites are species specific (meaning they only eat from rabbits) so I doubt anything else is giving them mites.
 

Bunnylady

Herd Master
Joined
Nov 27, 2009
Messages
2,431
Reaction score
3,060
Points
353
Location
Wilmington, NC
The life cycle of the ear mite makes the 8-10 day interval of treatment important. Go much longer than that, and you have multiple overlapping generations reinfecting the animals, and the treatment is of minimal effectiveness.

I would not use Ivermectin in animals that are pregnant. I have heard that Ivermectin can affect a growing fetus. I can't say whether or not that is true, but I learned not to try to hatch eggs after treating my hens with Ivermectin. I tried it, once. Most of the eggs quit before hatching, and the couple that did hatch were deformed. :idunno
 

secuono

Herd Master
Joined
Oct 16, 2010
Messages
9,183
Reaction score
13,674
Points
623
Location
Virginia is for Pasture Farmers!
I've used Ivomec on pregnant rabbits, no issues.
You need to treat every 2wks to get all the new ones that emerge.
Mites will crawl on everything, doesn't matter if the cage is wire or solid metal or wood, it needs to be cleaned. The building walls, floor, food/water bowls, pans, anything that comes in contact or is near the rabbits.
If more are getting mites, treat every rabbit, even if they don't show anything yet.
Don't be touching and petting a sick rabbit, even mites equals 'sick', and then touch a healthy rabbit. They need to be the last rabbits you interact with, separating them away from the rest of the herd can help as well, until the mites are gone.
 

Andrei

Chillin' with the herd
Joined
Nov 21, 2013
Messages
162
Reaction score
30
Points
45
50/50 honey and warm water and drip it inside the ears.
Repeat few times.
 

KathyN1

Herd lurker
Joined
Dec 13, 2013
Messages
1
Reaction score
1
Points
1
Hi, I am a licensed veterinary technician in Nebraska. Ear mites don't live very long in the environment, they need to live on he host, although if you went from rabbit to rabbit examining their ears it is possible you could transfer the mites or eggs. Our clinic has had the best luck with Revolution. It is applied topically at the back of the neck, it is systemic (same family of drug as ivermectin), and controls several other parasites including fur mites.
 

Latest posts

Top