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[[File:Dermacentor reticulatus.jpg|150px|thumb|right|''D.reticulatus'' male - Rainer Altenkamp, Berlin, Wikimedia Commons ]]  
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''Dermacentor spp.'' can be identified by;
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{{Taxobox
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|name              =''Dermacentor spp.''
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|kingdom            =Animalia
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|sub-kingdom        =
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|phylum            =[[:Category:Arthropods|Arthropoda]]
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|super-class        =
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|class              =[[:Category:Arachnida|Arachnida]]
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|sub-class          =Acari
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|super-order        =Parasitiformes
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|order              =Ixodida
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|sub-order          =
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|super-family      =Ixodidea
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|family            =Ixodidae
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|sub-family        =
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|genus              =Dermacentor
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|species            =Many
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}}
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==Introduction==
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[[File:Dermacentor reticulatus.jpg|150px|thumb|right|''D.reticulatus'' male - Rainer Altenkamp 2007, Wikimedia Commons ]]  
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''Dermacentor spp.'' of ticks can be identified by;
 
*Wide palps
 
*Wide palps
 
*Rectangular base of capitulum
 
*Rectangular base of capitulum
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*Festoons on the posterior margin
 
*Festoons on the posterior margin
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There are two species found in the UK and europe ''D.reticulatus'' and ''D.marginatus'', the ornate sheep tick however this is absent from the UK. ''D.reticulatus'' is a three host tick found on meadows, pastures and forests in England and Wales. Adults will parasitse large mammals whilst larval and nymphal stages attack small mammals, insectivores and sometimes birds. The tick is known to transmitt a number of disease in man and and veterinary species. ''D.reticulatus'' is responsible for transmitting ''Babesia canis'' in dogs, ''B.divergens'' and ''B.ovis''in cattle as well as Q fever (''C.burnetii''), tularemia, ''Brucella'', ''Anaplasma ovis'' and ''Rickettsia conorii'' the cause of Boutonneuse fever. In horse ''D.reticulatus'' is responsible for the transmission of ''Babesia caballi'' and ''B.equi''. ''D.marginatus''
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There are two species found in the UK and Europe ''D.reticulatus'' and ''D.marginatus'', the ornate sheep tick however this is absent from the UK. ''D.reticulatus'' is a three host tick found on meadows, pastures and forests in England and Wales. Adults will parasitise large mammals whilst larval and nymphal stages attack small mammals, insectivores and sometimes birds. The tick is known to transmit a number of disease in man and and veterinary species. ''D.reticulatus'' is responsible for transmitting ''[[Babesia]] canis'' in dogs, ''B.divergens'' and ''B.ovis''in cattle as well as Q fever (''[[Coxiella burnetti|C.burnetti]]''), tularemia, ''[[Brucella species|Brucella]]'', ''[[Anaplasma ovis]]'' and ''Rickettsia conorii'' the cause of Boutonneuse fever. In horse ''D.reticulatus'' is responsible for the transmission of ''Babesia caballi'' and ''B.equi''.  
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{{Learning
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|literature search = [http://www.cabdirect.org/search.html?rowId=1&options1=AND&q1=Dermacentor&occuring1=title&rowId=2&options2=AND&q2=&occuring2=freetext&rowId=3&options3=AND&q3=&occuring3=freetext&publishedstart=2000&publishedend=yyyy&calendarInput=yyyy-mm-dd&la=any&it=any&show=all&x=47&y=10 ''Dermacentor'' publications since 2000]
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|Vetstream = [https://www.vetstream.com/canis/search?s=tick Tick]
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}}
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{{review}}
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{{OpenPages}}
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[[Category:Hard_Ticks_-_UK]][[Category:Expert_Review]]
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