1. Tick burden on European roe deer (Capreolus capreolus)
- Author
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Ferdinand Rühe, Peter Hagedorn, Christian Kiffner, Matthias Niedrig, and Torsten Vor
- Subjects
Male ,Nymph ,Veterinary medicine ,Tick infestation ,animal diseases ,030231 tropical medicine ,Ectoparasitic Infestations ,Biology ,Tick ,Models, Biological ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Capreolus ,Life Sciences ,Life Sciences, general ,Animal Ecology ,Entomology ,Animal Genetics and Genomics ,Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography ,Germany ,biology.animal ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,Lyme disease ,Animals ,Dermacentor ,030304 developmental biology ,Population Density ,0303 health sciences ,Ixodes ,Ecology ,Deer ,Vector borne diseases ,General Medicine ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Roe deer ,Animal ecology ,Capreolus capreolus ,Encephalitis ,Insect Science ,Female ,Seasons ,Ixodidae - Abstract
In our study we assessed the tick burden on roe deer (Capreolus capreolus L.) in relation to age, physical condition, sex, deer density and season. The main objective was to find predictive parameters for tick burden. In September 2007, May, July, and September 2008, and in May and July 2009 we collected ticks on 142 culled roe deer from nine forest departments in Southern Hesse, Germany. To correlate tick burden and deer density we estimated deer density using line transect sampling that accounts for different detectability in March 2008 and 2009, respectively. We collected more than 8,600 ticks from roe deer heads and necks, 92.6% of which were Ixodes spp., 7.4% Dermacentor spp. Among Ixodes, 3.3% were larvae, 50.5% nymphs, 34.8% females and 11.4% males, with significant seasonal deviation. Total tick infestation was high, with considerable individual variation (from 0 to 270 ticks/deer). Adult tick burden was positively correlated with roe deer body indices (body mass, age, hind foot length). Significantly more nymphs were found on deer from forest departments with high roe deer density indices, indicating a positive correlation with deer abundance. Overall, tick burden was highly variable. Seasonality and large scale spatial characteristics appeared to be the most important factors affecting tick burden on roe deer. peerReviewed
- Published
- 2010
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