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Ticks are obligatory parasites with complex life cycles that often depend on larger bodied vertebrates as final hosts. These traits make them particularly sensitive to local coextinction with their host. Loss of wildlife abundance and diversity should thus lead to loss of tick abundance and diversity to the point where only generalist tick species remain. However, direct empirical tests of these hypotheses are lacking, despite their relevance to our understanding of tick-borne disease emergence in disturbed environments. Here, we compare vertebrate and tick communities across 12 forest islands and peninsulas in the Panama Canal that ranged 1000-fold in size (2.6-2811.3 ha). We used drag sampling and camera trapping to directly assess the abundance and diversity of communities of questing ticks and vertebrate hosts. We found that the abundance and species richness of ticks were positively related to those of wildlife. Specialist tick species were only present in fragments where their final hosts were found. Further, less diverse tick communities had a higher relative abundance of the generalist tick species Amblyomma oblongoguttatum, a potential vector of spotted fever group rickettsiosis. These findings support the host-parasite coextinction hypothesis, and indicate that loss of wildlife can indeed have cascading effects on tick communities. Our results also imply that opportunities for pathogen transmission via generalist ticks may be higher in habitats with degraded tick communities. If these patterns are general, then tick identities and abundances serve as useful bioindicators of ecosystem health, with low tick diversity reflecting low wildlife diversity and a potentially elevated risk of interspecific disease transmission via remaining host species and generalist ticks.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpara.2018.08.008 | DOI Listing |
Cureus
August 2025
Family and Community Medicine, Penn State Health Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, USA.
Febrile illnesses with associated laboratory abnormalities can have a wide differential diagnosis. While geographic location and seasonality can inform a workup, the overall incidence of specific conditions can lead to anchoring biases. Tick-borne illnesses are an important pathology to consider, despite known patterns and occurrences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTicks Tick Borne Dis
September 2025
Center for Computational Intelligence to Predict Health and Environmental Risks (CIPHER), The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, USA; Department of Epidemiology and Community Health, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, USA. Electronic address: rvieira@charlot
Rickettsia spp. are Gram-negative obligate intracellular bacteria, with Rickettsia africae being transmitted by Amblyomma ticks and posing a zoonotic risk. The status of diseases like rickettsiosis is largely unknown in Somalia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Med Entomol
August 2025
Department of Entomology, Texas A&M University AgriLife Research, College Station, TX, USA.
Tick- and mosquito-borne diseases in the United States are occurring at increasing rates and are heterogeneously distributed among the states. The allocation of public health resources and the attention of a research community on ticks and mosquitoes should be proportional to the number of reported human disease cases in each state. We conducted a systematic literature review of all publications on field-based studies of mosquitoes and ticks as a proxy for resource availability and research attention and compared these to the number of human tick- and mosquito-borne disease cases.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInsects
August 2025
Biological Sciences, Bishop's University, 2600 College Street, Sherbrooke, QC J1M 1Z7, Canada.
Ongoing changes in the distribution and abundance of several tick species of medical relevance in Canada have prompted the development of the eTick platform-an image-based crowd-sourcing public surveillance tool for Canada enabling rapid tick species identification by trained personnel, and public health guidance based on tick species and province of residence of the submitter. Considering that more than 100,000 images from over 73,500 identified records representing 25 tick species have been submitted to eTick since the public launch in 2018, a partial automation of the image processing workflow could save substantial human resources, especially as submission numbers have been steadily increasing since 2021. In this study, we evaluate an end-to-end artificial intelligence (AI) pipeline to support tick identification from eTick user-submitted images, characterized by heterogeneous quality and uncontrolled acquisition conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZoonoses Public Health
August 2025
School of Applied Arts and Sciences, College of Integrative Arts and Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA.
Introduction: Rocky Mountain spotted fever (RMSF), a rapidly progressing febrile disease caused by the bacterium Rickettsia rickettsii, is the deadliest tick-borne disease in the world. Human infection initially results in non-specific symptoms and, if untreated, can result in death in up to 35% of cases. Rhipicephalus sanguineus (brown dog tick) was discovered to spread RMSF in Arizona and Northern Mexico in the early 2000s, and the disease is now considered endemic in areas of the Southwestern United States.
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