Palgo Journals of Agriculture , Vol. 10(1`) PP. 11-15 ,January, 2026. Copyright © 2026 Palgo Journals
Green infrastructure and nature-based solutions for integrated tick and Theileria control at the wildlife-livestock interface in Midlands Province, Zimbabwe
Dr Oliver Vulindhlela Mutero3, Dr Madeline Siyazisiwe Sibula1, Dr Jenipher Zulu2 and Prof Fashion Phiri3
1National University of Science and Technology, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe
2Levy Mwanawasa Medical University, School of Health Sciences, Lusaka, Zambia
3Africa Research University, School of Postgraduate Studies, Lusaka, Zimbabwe
Abstract
Tick-borne diseases remain a major constraint to cattle production in sub-Saharan Africa, with theileriosis posing a
persistent challenge in communal grazing systems. In Zimbabwe’s Midlands Province, acaricide-based tick control is
increasingly undermined by resistance, inconsistent compliance, and environmental concerns. This study integrated
molecular epidemiology, farmer survey data, and ecological analysis to evaluate green infrastructure and nature-based
solutions for sustainable tick and Theileria control. Ticks collected from cattle in Gweru, Kwekwe and Mvuma districts were
screened using PCR, revealing circulation of Theileria parva, Theileria taurotragi, and locally distinct variants, with higher
prevalence in wildlife-livestock interface areas. A structured questionnaire administered to 390 farmers indicated heavy
reliance on synthetic acaricides, declining adherence to dipping schedules, and widespread reports of reduced acaricide
efficacy. Integrated analysis demonstrated strong associations between interface intensity, tick burden, and infection risk.
Based on these findings, a nature-based control framework incorporating botanical acaricides, grazing management,
biodiversity-supported biological control, and eco-efficient dipping infrastructure is proposed. The study demonstrates that
sustainable control of tick-borne theileriosis requires a shift from chemical dependency towards integrated, ecosystem
based approaches aligned with green infrastructure and One Health principles.
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Keywords: Tick-borne diseases; Theileria; Integrated tick management; Nature-based solutions; Wildlife-livestock
interface; Zimbabwe
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