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Evidence of Protozoan and Bacterial Infection and Co-Infection and Partial Blood Feeding in the Invasive Tick Haemaphysalis longicornis in Pennsylvania

Journal of Parasitology, ISSN: 1937-2345, Vol: 109, Issue: 4, Page: 265-273
2023
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New Protozoan Infections Study Results from Center for Vector Biology Described (Evidence of Protozoan and Bacterial Infection and Co-infection and Partial Blood Feeding In the Invasive Tick Haemaphysalis Longicornis In Pennsylvania)

2023 AUG 28 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at NewsRx Life Science Daily -- Investigators discuss new findings in Protozoan Infections. According

Article Description

The Asian longhorned tick, Haemaphysalis longicornis, an invasive tick species in the United States, has been found actively host-seeking while infected with several human pathogens. Recent work has recovered large numbers of partially engorged, host-seeking H. longicornis, which together with infection findings raises the question of whether such ticks can reattach to a host and transmit pathogens while taking additional bloodmeals. Here we conducted molecular blood meal analysis in tandem with pathogen screening of partially engorged, host-seeking H. longicornis to identify feeding sources and more inclusively characterize acarological risk. Active, statewide surveillance in Pennsylvania from 2020 to 2021 resulted in the recovery of 22/1,425 (1.5%) partially engorged, host-seeking nymphal and 5/163 (3.1%) female H. longicornis. Pathogen testing of engorged nymphs detected 2 specimens positive for Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato, 2 for Babesia microti, and 1 co-infected with Bo. burgdorferi s.l. and Ba. microti. No female specimens tested positive for pathogens. Conventional PCR blood meal analysis of H. longicornis nymphs detected avian and mammalian hosts in 3 and 18 specimens, respectively. Mammalian blood was detected in all H. longicornis female specimens. Only 2 H. longicornis nymphs produced viable sequencing results and were determined to have fed on black-crowned night heron, Nycticorax nycticorax. These data are the first to molecularly confirm H. longicornis partial blood meals from vertebrate hosts and Ba. microti infection and co-infection with Bo. burgdorferi s.l. in host-seeking specimens in the United States, and the data help characterize important determinants indirectly affecting vectorial capacity. Repeated blood meals within a life stage by pathogen-infected ticks suggest that an understanding of the vector potential of invasive H. longicornis populations may be incomplete without data on their natural host-seeking behaviors and blood-feeding patterns in nature.

Bibliographic Details

Price, Keith J; Khalil, Noelle; Witmier, Bryn J; Coder, Brooke L; Boyer, Christian N; Foster, Erik; Eisen, Rebecca J; Molaei, Goudarz

American Society of Parasitologists

Immunology and Microbiology; Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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