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      Effects of Microscale Habitat Physiognomy on the Focal Distribution ofIxodes scapularisandAmblyomma americanum(Acari: Ixodidae) Nymphs

      , ,
      Environmental Entomology
      Entomological Society of America

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          Biometry.

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            Impact of microclimate on immature tick-rodent host interactions (Acari: Ixodidae): implications for parasite transmission.

            Rodents play a significant role in enzootic cycles of tick-borne pathogens, notably, in the northern hemisphere, tick-borne encephalitis virus and Lyme borreliosis spirochaetes. The relative numbers of nymphal and larval ticks feeding on rodents are crucial variables in determining the probability of rodent infection and the degree of amplification of infection prevalence in the tick population. Manipulation of the microclimate within quasinatural experimental arenas revealed that under increasingly dry conditions the numbers of unfed nymphal Ixodes ricinus L. questing in upper layers of the herbage decreased, whereas the rate of fat use and the numbers of nymphs feeding on small rodents, both increased. This is consistent with nymphs descending to the moist lower vegetation layers for water replenishment, where they would come into contact with small hosts. Very few larvae quested or fed on rodents under the dry conditions, but many more did so once the humidity increased, suggesting that larvae escape desiccation by becoming quiescent. The ratio of larvae to nymphs feeding on rodents thus increases with increasing humidity, contributing to the seasonal and geographical variation in disease transmission dynamics.
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              Assessing and Interpreting the Spatial Distributions of Insect Populations

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Environmental Entomology
                Environ Entomol
                Entomological Society of America
                0046-225X
                1938-2936
                December 01 2002
                December 01 2002
                : 31
                : 6
                : 1085-1090
                Article
                10.1603/0046-225X-31.6.1085
                3029088c-978e-403c-8a4b-5ab477824b15
                © 2002
                History

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