by David Moore
Manager of Technical Services and Board Certified Entomologist
with contributions by Eric Smith, PhD, BCE
In this blog on ticks, we’ll review the 2 species that are more commonly encountered and are of greater medical importance to humans. This first group of two species consists of the deer tick (also called the black-legged tick) and the lone star tick. These tick types are typically encountered outside the home while walking in yards/parks or hiking, and are important transmitters of the organisms that cause diseases affecting humans.
RECOGNITION
Ticks are not insects, but are actually arachnids (like spiders). Adults are usually greater than 1/8″ long, flattened, and oval in shape. Unlike insects, ticks do not have antenna and the adults have 8 legs instead of six.
Immature ticks, also called seed ticks, only have 3 pairs of legs. They may or may not be capable of transmitting disease organisms to humans, depending on the tick species.
IDENTIFICATION
Correct identification to species is critical because different species may transmit different disease-causing organisms. If bitten, be sure to carefully remove the specimen in rubbing alcohol, and take it with you to the doctor for identification. An Entomologist with a microscope is often necessary to confirm species identification.
Black-legged or deer tick: Unfed adults are about 1/8″ long. The female’s color is dark reddish brown except that her body’s rear half is orangish brown; males have their entire body reddish brown. The abdomen does not have small rectangular areas divided by grooves along its rear margin.
Lone star tick: Unfed adults are about 1/8″, but when engorged with blood, they are up to 7/16″ long and 3/8″ wide. Their color is reddish brown, but they become slate gray when engorged with blood. The female has a single whitish to silvery spot on the center of her back, whereas the male has several whitish spots along its rear margin. The abdomen has small rectangular areas divided by grooves along its rear margin.
DISEASE ORGANISMS TRANSMITTED
Black-legged or deer tick: This tick is an important transmitter of Lyme disease (the most common animal-transmitted disease in the United States), bacteria caused human granulocytic anaplasmosis, and babesiosis (a malaria-like disease caused by a protozoan).
Lone star tick: This tick transmits the bacteria causing tularemia, and may transmit a Lyme-like disease spirochete and/or ehrlichioses (bacteria caused disease).
With Lyme disease, symptoms may or may not be evident for years, it is important to cap take the tick with you to see a physician. The most common symptom is a spreading ring-like rash at the bite site, like a bullseye, but it is seen in only about 70% of people bitten. So, the absence of a ring-like rash at the bite site does not mean that you are free of a Lyme disease infection.
Symptoms are usually divided into 3 stages, but they mimic several different commonly occurring diseases:
Stage 1
- Expanding rash from bite site; appears about 3-30 days after the bite.
- Bulls-eye rash.
- One or more rash sites.
- May or may not have flu-like symptoms.
- May come and go, or persist.
Stage 2
- Complications or disorders of the heart or nervous system.
- Heart. Varying degrees of blockage of the heart muscle.
- Nervous system. Meningitis, encephalitis, facial paralysis.
- “Bells’s palsy,” other conditions involving peripheral nerves.
- Migratory pain in joints, tendons, muscles, and bones; often without joint swelling or redness.
Stage 3
- Months to years after the disease onset.
- Arthritis that appears and disappears intermittently for several years.
- Enlarged knee joints.
- Erosion of cartilage and bone.
- Once bitten by a black-legged/deer tick possessing the Lyme disease spirochete, antibodies may not be produced by your body for up to 6 weeks. Therefore, it takes time to verify an infection.
TICK REMOVAL
Using sharp-pointed tweezers, grasp the tick as close to the skin as possible and then slowly but steadily pull the tick out by grasping its mouthparts with the tweezers. If you grasp the tick by its abdomen, you may force the disease organisms into the individual. Put the tick into a small vial containing rubbing alcohol and then clean the area of the bite with rubbing alcohol and apply an anti-itch cream.
TICK HABITS
Most ticks climb up on low-lying vegetation and grasses/weeds along trails frequented by their hosts. Here, they cling to the vegetation and wait for a host to pass to grab ahold of the host. Host animals typically travel along established trails/paths. Such areas include paths through the woods and the grass-forest transitional zone (where your grass yard meets the trees). Avoid these situations when possible.
CONTROL
The primary reservoir of Lyme disease in the white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus), and small animals serve as hosts for the lone star tick. Our common white-tailed deer serve as the primary host for adult black-legged or deer ticks.
Habitat modification
- Keep grass mowed to 3″ or less which reduces tick and rodent harborage and grass seeds (favorite food of rodents).
- If there is a fence line, remove any vegetation for 6-10″ from under the fence.
- Trim back vegetation along trails, paths, and yard edges.
- Remove debris
- Moist areas attract insects (a favorite food of rodents) and provide rodent harborage.
- Removal of rodent food attractants such as bird-feeders, fruit producing shrubs, etc.
Removal of hosts
- This can be done by the use of rodenticides and/or traps.
- Create a 12-18″ wide vegetation-free and mulch-free zone around the perimeter or foundation of your house. Use landscape cloth under 4-6″ of crushed rock/brick or pea gravel. Keep this perimeter zone free of vegetation.
Pesticide application
- Treat likely tick habitat such as any grass-tree transitional zone/area, along paths/trails, unmaintained fence lines, etc. with appropriately labeled pesticide according to label directions. The first application should be in the early spring.
If you want help with your rodent control program, obtaining the proper rodent control equipment, and/or help in making appropriate pesticide applications, contact a pest management professional.