Australia鈥檚 sheep are naturally itching for tea tree鈥檚 good oil
Scientists at UQ's Queensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation (QAAFI) have discovered that one of Australia's best known folk remedies might help to alleviate the sheep industry's biggest headache.
Although indigenous Australians have long used the native tea tree (Melaleuca alternifolia) plant for medical purposes, only recently has tea tree oil been seriously considered as a natural, on-farm insecticide, QAAFI senior research fellow, Dr Peter James said.
鈥淭ests have shown that tea tree oil has potential to be used commercially in a range of farming products that would very likely benefit both farmers and their animals,鈥 he said.
鈥淚n scientific trials we've demonstrated that lice were eradicated from sheep dipped in diluted tea tree oil, using concentrations of between one and two per cent.
鈥淥ur sheep trials confirmed our work in the laboratory, which suggested that a one per cent tea tree oil formulation could kill both lice and their eggs.鈥
Tea tree oil also killed blowfly maggots and eggs and prevented flies laying new eggs on treated wool for up to six weeks.
The antiseptic effects and wound-healing properties of tea tree oil may also help flystrike resolution.
Flystrike and louse infestations are estimated to cost the Australian sheep industry more than $400 million annually and tea tree oil is well placed to capitalise on global trends towards natural products, particularly for the wool industry.
鈥淭ea tree oil-based products could potentially work to counteract resistance to existing pesticides, plus reduce occupational exposure to farm chemicals and greatly reduce the threat of environmental contamination,鈥 Dr James said.
鈥淣atural products are sometimes criticised for their variability.
"However, the composition of tea tree oil is stipulated under stringent international standards, providing confidence for consistency of effect.鈥
Despite being a natural compound, any future tea tree oil-based product would have to undergo rigorous trials and testing before it could be registered for farm use.
鈥淕etting the formulation exactly right is vital and it's something that will require more research,鈥 Dr James said.
鈥淚t's not as simple as mixing tea tree oil with water and applying it to your sheep; it's a complex and exact science.
鈥淢ore research needs to be conducted before we can definitively say tea tree oil is a viable treatment for fly strike and lice infestations.
"However, these initial findings are very encouraging.鈥
The study: 鈥淐ontrolling Fly Strike and Louse Infections in Sheep with Tea Tree Oil鈥 was funded and published by the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation.
Provided by University of Queensland