Oroville Mercury-Register

AS RAIN CONTINUES, SO DOES LYME DISEASE RISK

- By Jake Hutchison jhutchison@chicoer.com

OROVILLE >> April showers might bring May flowers, but they also create the perfect breeding ground for ticks and mosquitos.

Ticks are active yearround, but those most known for carrying Lyme disease, the Western blacklegge­d tick, or ixodes pacificus, tend to thrive in green grass along the foothills and are more active during the winter and spring months when there is consistent rainfall.

Ryan Rothenwand­er, an ecologist with the Butte County Mosquito and Vector Control District, said he and other employees with the district go out to frequented areas within the county to collect ticks for testing.

“(The Western blacklegge­d tick) is our primary Lyme disease carrier,”

Rothenwand­er said. “So a bite from this tick could lead to transmissi­on of Lyme disease or tick-borne relapsing fever. The way we sample this is we travel along establishe­d trails at Bidwell Park, Loafer Creek, Lake Wyandotte or Lime Saddle, and we drag what is a fleece blanket on a pole for about 60 to 100 feet and check it and get the ticks off of it.”

Once the test results on the specimens are in, the district posts signs on the trails warning hikers, Rothenwand­er said, adding that it is important to check parts of the body that see more moisture or darkness such as the armpit after being outdoors for a period of time.

The risk of Lyme disease typically doesn't increase until the tick has been on the body for at least 24-48 hours. An early sign of Lyme

disease is a bullseye-shaped rash around the bite location. Those bitten by a tick should consult with a doctor for testing, Rothenwand­er said.

“Generally we do tell people to wear long sleeves and long pants,” Rothenwand­er

said. “They can tuck their pants into long socks. Wear closed-toes shoes of course.”

Rothenwand­er showcased some tools that can be used to remove ticks such as a pair of tweezers or a tick

or a tick key, which is a thin piece of metal or plastic with a hole that gradually shrinks into a point to lock onto the tick and pull it off. Ticks should be removed by clasping onto them as close to the skin as possible to make sure no part of it is left in the wound.

“We don't suggest burning a tick because that could influence it to regurgitat­e,” Rothenwand­er said. “When it puts the blood it was taking back into you, it's introducin­g even more disease particulat­es.”

Rothenwand­er added that trying to suffocate the tick using substances such as Vasoline is also ineffectiv­e.

Mosquitos

While mosquitos have seemingly been out in full force during the sunnier days recently, the temperatur­es

will need to rise before the risk of West Nile Virus returns.

As the Lyme disease season dies down, usually toward the end of May, Rothenwand­er said, the district begins to shift its focus toward mosquitos.

“As the tick season subsides, we will be transition­ing into a heavier mosquito season,” Rothenwand­er said. “The water is there after the rains and after irrigation has started on the rice fields and the temperatur­e has come up to anywhere from 65 to 75 degrees at nighttime. That's when we're going to start having a higher presence of mosquitoes for the season.”

For Butte County, West Nile tends to show up either toward the end of June or the beginning of July.

“Once West Nile presents, then we notify the Public Health office and newspapers and publicatio­ns that what we've found was West Nile Virus.” Rothenwand­er said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JAKE HUTCHISON — ENTERPRISE-RECORD ?? Ryan Rothenwand­er, an ecologist with the Butte County Mosquito and Vector District, shows tools that help with tick removal on Monday in Oroville.
PHOTOS BY JAKE HUTCHISON — ENTERPRISE-RECORD Ryan Rothenwand­er, an ecologist with the Butte County Mosquito and Vector District, shows tools that help with tick removal on Monday in Oroville.
 ?? ?? Ticks are displayed at a workspace at the Butte County Mosquito and Vector District office in Oroville on Monday.
Ticks are displayed at a workspace at the Butte County Mosquito and Vector District office in Oroville on Monday.
 ?? JAKE HUTCHISON — ENTERPRISE-RECORD ?? An assortment of ticks collected by the Butte County Mosquito and Vector District on display in Oroville on Monday.
JAKE HUTCHISON — ENTERPRISE-RECORD An assortment of ticks collected by the Butte County Mosquito and Vector District on display in Oroville on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States