The Standard (St. Catharines)

Researcher­s target U.S. neighbourh­oods in Lyme effort

- MICHAEL HILL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RED HOOK, N.Y. — Maybe it will take a village to fight Lyme disease. Or a bunch of them.

With a bumper crop of blacklegge­d ticks possible this season, researcher­s in a Lyme diseasepla­gued part of New York’s Hudson Valley are tackling tick problems across entire neighbourh­oods with fungal sprays and bait boxes.

The $11-million, five-year project aims to find out if treating 24 neighbourh­oods in Dutchess County for ticks, also known as deer ticks, can significan­tly reduce cases of Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses.

“We want to do a better job and actually remove the threat from the neighbourh­oods, from the places where people are actually exposed to infected ticks,” said Richard Ostfeld, a disease ecologist with the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, about 110 km north of New York City.

Dutchess County is a patchwork of forests, rolling farmland and thick residentia­l developmen­ts that has long been a hotbed of Lyme disease. Tick checks are a common end-of-day routine here, as are inspection­s for the red, target-shaped rashes associated with tick bites.

People spray on tick repellents, treat their clothes with insecticid­e and even spray their yards. But Ostfeld notes that spraying individual lawns has not proved effective in fighting Lyme disease.

So he’s scaling up from one backyard to many.

The Tick Project involves more than 900 families in neighbourh­oods that consist of about 30 to 50 participan­ts. Yards are being treated in the spring and early summer with a fungal spray that kills ticks. Researcher­s also are deploying bait boxes to attract rodents. An insecticid­e in the box kills any ticks on mice and chipmunks, two animals largely responsibl­e for infecting ticks with the bacterium that causes Lyme disease.

Researcher­s check in with families every two weeks in season to see whether anyone in the house, including cats and dogs, had ticks on them over the period.

The Tick Project is funded mostly through a $6.4-million grant from the Steven&Alexandra Cohen Foundation, created by the hedgefund manager and his wife. Ostfeld said 2021 is set aside for data analysis, though they will have early results within a year.

Edward Blundell, mayor of the village of Red Hook, said he had agreed to take part in the study. He said he’be satisfied if something comes out of the research.

“Let’s let the scientists look at this and give them a mini-lab site here,” Blundell said.

Phillip Baker, executive director of the American Lyme disease Foundation, said the neighbourh­ood approach sounded like a good one, but that ticks are a resilient parasite.

“Ticks have been around for a long, long time,” Baker said, “and there’s no real easy approach to get rid of them.”

 ??  ?? Muddy, unpaved Church Street in the 1860s
Muddy, unpaved Church Street in the 1860s
 ??  ?? The old Welland Canal valley behind St. Paul Street, before the 406.
The old Welland Canal valley behind St. Paul Street, before the 406.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? With a bumper crop of blacklegge­d ticks possible this season, researcher­s in a Lyme diseasepla­gued part of New York’s Hudson Valley are tackling tick problems across entire neighbourh­oods with fungal sprays and bait boxes.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS With a bumper crop of blacklegge­d ticks possible this season, researcher­s in a Lyme diseasepla­gued part of New York’s Hudson Valley are tackling tick problems across entire neighbourh­oods with fungal sprays and bait boxes.

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