Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Urbanization alters abiotic conditions, vegetation, and wildlife populations in ways that affect tick abundance and tick-borne disease prevalence. Likely due to such changes, tick abundance has increased in many US urban areas. Despite growing public health importance of tick-borne diseases, little is known about how ticks are influenced by urbanization in North America, especially in the central United States where several pathogens occur at or near their highest incidences. To identify factors influencing tick abundance across a gradient of urbanization intensity, we used CO2 traps and flagging to sample ticks at 16 parks across Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA over 2 yr, conducted vegetation surveys, and used trail cameras to estimate a deer abundance index. Our results indicate there is a risk of encountering ticks across the entire urbanization gradient from exurban areas to the urban core, although some species (Dermacentor variabilis (Say)) appear less-common in heavily-urbanized areas. Vegetation variables were also associated with tick abundance. For example, Amblyomma maculatum Koch decreased with increasing woody plant and leaf litter cover, and there was a weak positive relationship between D. variabilis abundance and cover of understory eastern redcedar (Juniperus virginiana L.), indicating this native encroaching tree may increase tick populations in urban areas of the Great Plains. The deer abundance index was positively correlated with A. maculatum and D. variabilis abundance but unrelated to A. americanum (L.) abundance. Public health officials and land managers can use such information about parks/greenspaces and their surroundings to focus public education and land management efforts designed to reduce tick-borne disease prevalence.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jme/tjad132DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tick abundance
16
abundance
10
factors influencing
8
great plains
8
tick-borne disease
8
disease prevalence
8
urban areas
8
public health
8
deer abundance
8
variabilis abundance
8

Similar Publications

New tick records in the western Brazilian Amazon, with notes on rickettsial infection and molecular evidence for Amblyomma crassum in Brazil.

Acta Trop

September 2025

Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas, Universidade de São Paulo - ICB5/USP, Monte Negro, RO, Brazil; Instituto Nacional de Epidemiologia da Amazônia Ocidental - INCT-EpiAmO, Porto Velho, RO, Brazil; Centro de Pesquisas em Medicina Tropical - CEPEM, Porto Velho, RO, Brazil; Laboratório de Medicina T

This study evaluated the richness and abundance of ticks collected during two years in forest fragments of the state of Acre, western Brazilian Amazon. Considering all the environmental and host collections, the following 15 tick species were collected: Amblyomma coelebs, Amblyomma crassum, Amblyomma humerale, Amblyomma latepunctatum, Amblyomma longirostre, Amblyomma naponense, Amblyomma nodosum, Amblyomma oblongoguttatum, Amblyomma ovale, Amblyomma pacae, Amblyomma rotundatum, Amblyomma scalpturatum, Haemaphysalis juxtakochi, Ixodes luciae and Rhipicephalus microplus. Data from the most two abundant tick species, A.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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 PDF

Metagenomic evidence of viral secretion from tick salivary glands to saliva: implications for potential horizontal transmission.

Ticks Tick Borne Dis

August 2025

State Key Laboratory of Virology and Biosafety and National Virus Resource Center, Wuhan Institute of Virology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, 430071, China. Electronic address:

Ticks transmit diverse viral pathogens to hosts during blood-feeding via saliva secretion. This study characterized viral compositions in salivary glands and saliva from adults of four tick species (Ixodes persulcatus, Rhipicephalus microplus, Haemaphysalis longicornis, and Haemaphysalis concinna) collected in China. Meta-transcriptomic analysis revealed distinct viromes across species, with Flaviviridae dominant in R.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Management of tick-borne disease necessitates an understanding of tick phenology, tick-host associations, and pathogen dynamics. In a recreational hotspot outside of one of the largest cities in the United States, we conducted a year of monthly standardized tick drag sampling and wildlife trapping in Sam Houston National Forest, a high use recreation site near Houston in east Texas, US. By sampling 150 wildlife hosts of 18 species, including rodents, meso-mammals, deer, reptiles, and amphibians, we collected 87 blood samples, 90 ear biopsies, and 861 ticks representing four species (Amblyomma americanum, Dermacentor variabilis, Ixodes scapularis and Ixodes texanus).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: In North America, the tick-borne spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto (ss) causes Lyme disease and is transmitted by the blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis. Acquisition and transmission of B. burgdorferi ss occur during blood feeding, which is done by three tick stages, larvae, nymphs, and adults.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF