1. Tick distribution in border regions of Northwestern China.
- Author
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Sheng, Jinliang, Jiang, Mengmeng, Yang, Meihua, Bo, Xinwen, Zhao, Shanshan, Zhang, Yanyan, Wureli, Hazihan, Wang, Baoju, Tu, Changchun, and Wang, Yuanzhi
- Abstract
Abstract Ticks are important vectors of emerging and re-emerging pathogens. The aim of this study was to determine tick species occurring in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region (XUAR), especially on border regions. A total of 22,994 ticks (including 22,629 adults, 365 larvae and nymphs), belonging to six tick genera (i.e. Dermacentor , Hyalomma , Rhipicephalus , Haemaphysalis , Ixodes and Argas) and fourteen tick species, were collected from ten animal hosts in thirty-five counties (cities) in XUAR during 2011 - 2017. Rhipicephalus turanicus , Dermacentor niveus , Hyalomma asiaticum and Dermacentor marginatus were dominantly sampled from domestic animals while Dermacentor nuttalli , Haemaphysalis punctata , Haemaphysalis concinna , Rhipicephalus sanguineus sensu lato, Dermacentor silvarum , Hyalomma scupense and Argas persicus were sporadically found. Based on 16S rDNA , phylogenetic analyses showed that: i) R. turanicus genotypes in XUAR showed geographical separation, and belonged to clade I (major distribution in the Central Asian) rather than clade II (major distribution in the Mediterranean Basin); ii) Ixodes kaiseri , firstly sampled from Asian badgers (Meles leucurus), was in ancestral position compared to European tick species when combining COI haplotypes; and iii) Haemaphysalis erinacei from marbled polecats in China was a separate genotype compared with that in Mediterranean and Europe. Our findings suggest that geographical range plays a more important role than host-association in tick phylogeny, especially for R. turanicus , I. kaiseri and H. erinacei. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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