The Denver Post

NEW TICK SPECIES POSES HEALTH THREAT IN U.S.

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A new invasive tick species capable of transmitti­ng several severe diseases is spreading in the United States, posing an emerging threat to human and animal health, according to a pair of reports issued Thursday.

The Asian longhorned tick is the first invasive tick to arrive in the United States in about 80 years. It’s native to eastern China, Japan, the Russian Far East and the Korean Peninsula, and is now also establishe­d in Australia and New Zealand.

In August of last year, it was discovered on a 12-year-old pet Icelandic sheep in western New Jersey. Since then, the tick has been found in Arkansas, Connecticu­t, Maryland, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia and West Virginia. The species has been found on pets, livestock, wildlife and people. So far, though, there is no evidence that the tick has spread pathogens to humans, domestic animals or wildlife in the United States, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

But public health officials are worried about the potential for Haemaphysa­lis longicorni­s to spread disease. In other parts of the world, it is a major livestock pest; its bites can make people and animals seriously ill. In some parts of Australia and New Zealand, the ticks can suck so much blood from dairy cattle that they cause milk production to drop by 25 percent, researcher­s have found.

In Asia, the tick carries a virus that causes human hemorrhagi­c fever and kills up to 30 percent of its victims. Although that virus is not in the United States, it is closely related to the Heartland virus, another life-threatenin­g tickborne disease that circulates in the United States. Health officials are particular­ly concerned about the tick’s ability to adapt to be a vector for that virus and other tick-borne illnesses in the United States.

The tick “is potentiall­y capable of spreading a large number of diseases,” said Lyle Petersen of the CDC. — The Washington Post

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