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| TICKS   Dermacentor spp. -- Acarina, Ixodidae   (Contacts)     ----- CLICK on Photo to enlarge & search for Subject Matter with Ctrl/F.                GO TO ALL:  Bio-Control Cases     
          American Dog Tick.--The life cycle may be
  completed in 1-3 years, and there seems to be little activity during winter
  of in the hot summer.  Adults are most
  active in the spring and may live >2 years without food.  This is the only stage known to infest
  humans, dogs and domestic animals. 
  Small mammals, especially mice and rabbits, are considered to be the
  principal hosts.  Mating occurs on the
  host.  After engorging, they drop from
  the host and the females deposit their eggs in protected places in masses of
  4,000-6,500 eggs, after which they die. The eggs hatch into six-legged
  larvae, which attach to a passing host. 
  After feeding for several days, they become engorged, drop tot he
  ground, and molt to the nymphal stage. 
  When the nymph is ready to feed, it likewise seeks a host on which to
  attach.  When the nymph has become
  engorged, it also drops to the ground where it molts to the adult stage.  Both larvae and nymphs were observed to
  live >one year in the absence of food (Smith et al. 1946).           The encyrtid
  parasitoid, Hunterellus hookeri Howard (= Ixodiphagus caucurtei du Buysson) was
  introduced from France into the United States where it was propagated and
  released on Naushon Island, Massachusetts, in an attempt to control the
  American dog tick (Larrouse et al 1928). 
  Small numbers of nymphs of D.
  variabilis parasitized by
  the French strain of H. hookeri were released on Capers
  Island, South Carolina in 1931 (Bishopp 1934).  A larger effort was made on Martha's Vineyard Island, Mass.,
  where ca. 90,000 females of H.
  hookeri were released in two
  locations on the island during 1937-39. 
  The strain of parasitoid used originated in Texas (Smith & Cole
  1943).          Larrouse et al.
  (1928) reported that in the season following the releases of H. hookeri on Naushon Island immature parasitoids were found
  in a single nymph of the dog tick and a single nymph of another tick
  species.  Subsequent surveys were
  conducted in 1940 by Cobb (1942) and in 1941 by Smith & Cole (1943).  In both cases a few parasitoids were
  found, but none were recovered from the American dog tick.  Both this species and Ixodes scapularis
  Say were still observed in abundance; therefore, there was no evidence that
  any success was achieved.  Bishopp
  (1934) reported recovery of the parasitoid from a single nymph of D. variabilis on Caper Island two years after release.  In an assessment of results of release of
  the parasitoid in Martha's Vineyard in 1937-39, Smith & Cole (1943)
  recovered no parasitoids from ticks in the release areas and observed no
  reduction in tick abundance that could be attributed to the parasitoid.  A later report by Smith et al. (1946) also
  indicates that the attempt was unsuccessful.          The biology of H. hookeri was reported in Wood (1911) Cooley (1928, Cooley
  & Kohls (1933) and Smith & Cole (1943), Cole (1965) and McMurtry
  (1978).            Rocky Mountain Wood Tick.--The Rocky Mountain wood tick is a vector of Rocky
  Mountain spotted fever, a rickettsial pathogen caused disease that may be
  fatal to humans, but is primarily harmful to wild animals.  It can also carry tularemia, another
  disease primarily of wild animals, but also infectious to humans.  This tick is also responsible for tick
  paralysis, which affects the motor nerves starting in the legs and gradually
  spreading to the rest of the body. 
  This seems to result only if the tick feeds at the back of the neck or
  the base of the skull, and removal of the tick usually results in
  recovery.  Dermacentor andersoni
  occurs in the western United States, primarily in the Rocky Mountains and
  also in Canada.  Spotted fever occurs
  in other areas, but its chief vector there is the American dog tick, D. variabilis (see McMurtry 1978).          The eggs of D. andersoni are laid on the ground.  They hatch in spring or early summer into
  six-legged larvae and climb onto grass blades or other vegetation and attach
  to passing animals, usually small rodents. 
  When fully fed in a few days, the larvae drop to the ground to molt to
  the nymphal stage, which usually does not feed until the following spring,
  when they attach to small animals, become engorged, and drop to the ground to
  transform to the adult stage (McMurtry 1978).  Though some adults may attach to hosts the same season, they
  apparently pass the rest of the summer and winter in hiding and find a host
  the following spring.  Mating takes
  place on the host, and when fully fed the female drops to the ground to
  deposit her eggs.  Only the adult
  stage is known to attack humans and large animals (Cooley 1932).          The encyrtid
  parasitoid H. hookeri was brought to Montana
  for colonization (Cooley 1928, Cooley & Kohls 1933).  Over 4 million parasitoids were liberated
  during 1927-32, mostly in Montana but also in Colorado, Oregon and
  Idaho.  Various methods were used,
  including release of adult parasitoids, scattering parasitized nymphs in
  grass and low vegetation, and liberating squirrels, which had been infested
  with parasitized nymphs.  The methods
  for mass production are described by Morton (1928).          Recovery of
  parasitoids was made in only one instance in 1929, when a few which had
  emerged from D. andersoni nymphs taken from
  squirrels captured in the Bitter Root Valley of Montana (Cooley & Kohls
  1933).  Cole (1965) reported that no
  reduction in the tick population was observed and no evidence has been
  obtained that the parasitoids were established in nature.          Other Ixodidae.--McMurtry
  (1978) reported on other species of Ixodidae that were subjects of biological
  control.  Alfeev (1940) reported on an
  experiment in which it was attempted to control Ixodes ricinus
  (L.) and I. persulcatus Schulze in a 250-acre
  pasture in the province of Leningrad, U.S.S.R.  Hunterellus hookeri was obtained from
  Montana in 1935 and propagated, and 2,600 adult parasitoids and 38,000
  parasitized ticks were liberated.  But
  no recoveries were reported.     REFERENCES:     [Additional
  references may be found at:  
  MELVYL Library ]   Alfeev, N. I.  1940.  The utilization of Hunterellus hookeri
  How. for the control of the ticks Ixodes
  ricinus L. and Ixodes persulcatus Sch. with reference to the peculiarities of
  their metamorphosis under the conditions of the Province of Leningrad.  In:  Pavlovsky, 2nd Conf. Parasitol.
  Problems, Nov.  1940.  Akad. Nauk. S.S.S.R. Isv.  23-5.   Bishopp, F. C.  1934.  Records of hymenopterous parasites of
  ticks in the United States.  Wash.
  Ent. Soc. Proc. 36:  87-8.   Cobb, S.  1942.  Tick parasites on Cape Cod.  Science 95:  503.   Cole, M. M.  1965.  Biological control of ticks by the use of
  hymenopterous parasites.  A review.  World Health Organ., EBL 43.65.  11 p.   Cooley, R. A.  1928.  Tick parasites.  Montana State Bd. Ent. 7th Bien. Rept.:  10-16.   Cooley, R. A.  1932.  The Rocky Mountain wood tick.  Montana Agric. Expt. Sta. Bull. 268.  58 p.   Cooley, R. A. & G. M. Kohls.  1933.  A summary on tick
  parasites.  5th Pacific Sci. Cong.
  Proc. 5:  3375-81.   McMurtry, J. A. 
  1978.  Acarina, Ixodidae.  In:  C. P. Clausen (ed.), Introduced Parasites
  and Predators of Arthropod Pests and Weeds: 
  A world Review.  U. S. Dept. Agriculture,
  Agric. Handbk. No. 480.  545 p.   Morton, F. A.  1928.  Quantity production of tick
  parasites.  Montana State Bd. Ent. 7th
  Bien. Rept.:  32-5   Smith, C. N. & M. M. Cole 1943.  Studies of parasites of the American dog tick.  J. Econ. Ent. 36:  569-72.   Smith, C. N., M. M. Cole & H. K. Gouck.  1946. 
  Biology and control of the American dog tick.  U. S. Dept. Agric. Tech. Bull. 905.  74 p.   Wood, H. P.  1911.  Notes on the life history of the tick
  parasite, Hunterrellus hookeri How.  J. Econ. Ent. 4:  425-31.     |