San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

INVASIVE TICK SPECIES IS EXPANDING ITS REACH IN THE U.S., RESEARCHER­S SAY

Experts are unsure of the potential danger to humans

- BY ERIN BLAKEMORE Blakemore writes for The Washington Post.

Since 2017, researcher­s have watched as Asian longhorned ticks, an invasive species not usually found in the Western Hemisphere, have spread across the United States.

Now, researcher­s are using the gruesome deaths of three cows in Ohio to sound the alarm about the ticks.

In an analysis in the Journal of Medical Entomology, they tracked the state’s first known establishe­d colony of the brown ticks. In 2021, a farmer contacted Ohio State University researcher­s, reporting that three of his cows had died during a tick infestatio­n. The cause was exsanguina­tion, suffered as tens of thousands of the ticks attacked the cows, including an adult bull, and bled them to death.

Researcher­s went to the pasture and dragged a muslin cloth along the ground, using a lint roller to pick up the sesame seedsized creatures, which balloon to the size of a pea when feeding on blood. They managed to gather 9,287 ticks in just 90 minutes.

Then, they tested 100 of the females for diseases. Eight had Anaplasma phagocytop­hilum, a tick-borne disease that can harm humans and animals. But the disease was not present in the surviving herd, and scientists concluded the cows had likely died of blood loss. The ticks have returned to the pasture despite pesticide treatment.

Researcher­s blame female ticks’ ability to asexually reproduce in the thousands, and ticks’ knack for hiding in tall grass and surviving harsh conditions, for the infestatio­n and similar situations in other states. Pesticides must touch individual ticks to be effective, and treatment is most effective before adults lay their eggs.

“You cannot spray your way out of an Asian longhorned tick infestatio­n,” said Risa Pesapane, assistant professor of veterinary preventive medicine at Ohio State and the paper’s senior author, in a news release. Instead, the researcher­s call for better surveillan­ce and integrated management.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s website, the ticks have been spotted in Arkansas, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Georgia, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.

Research on the ticks is ongoing. It is unclear whether they can pass germs along to humans in high enough quantities to cause disease.

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