Changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search
2,766 bytes added ,  21:53, 18 May 2010
no edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:  
'''''<ncl style=bullet maxdepth=3 headings=bullet headstart=2
 
'''''<ncl style=bullet maxdepth=3 headings=bullet headstart=2
 
       showcats=1 showarts=1>Category:{{PAGENAME}}</ncl>
 
       showcats=1 showarts=1>Category:{{PAGENAME}}</ncl>
 +
 +
 +
{{review}}
 +
<categorytree mode=pages style="float:right; clear:right; margin-left:1ex; border:1px solid gray; padding:0.7ex; background-color:white;">Arachnida</categorytree>
 +
==Introduction==
 +
 +
Ticks (Suborder: Metastigmata)
 +
Ticks are ectoparasites which live by haematophagy on the blood of mammals, birds and sometimes reptiles and amphibians. Ticks are of considerable veterinary importance, particularly in warmer climates where they can cause substantial economic losses through decreased productivity and most importantly by disease transmission. They are also important in human medicine as they cause [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lyme_disease Lyme Disease] (borreliosis) and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tick-borne_meningoencephalitis tick-borne encephalitis/meningoencephalitis].
 +
 +
Ticks decrease productivity by causing fleece and hide damage, preventing animals from feeding (tick worry), ascending motor paralysis and anaemia. Infestation can also lead to secondary infection from [[Myiasis Producing Flies|blowfly]] and [[Screw Worm|screw worms]] leading to [[Blowfly Strike|'''strike''']].
 +
 +
The soft ticks are only of importance in warmer climates, whereas the hard ticks cause significant problems in both warmer and temperate climates.
 +
 +
==[[Tick Morphology]]==
 +
 +
 +
 +
==Life cycle==
 +
[[Image:Ticks mating.jpg|thumb|right|150px|''Ixodes ricinus'' mating - Wikimedia Commons]]
 +
*Ticks are temporary parasites so only spend a short period of their lives on the host species
 +
 +
*When larvae are seeking a host they are known as '''seed ticks'''
 +
 +
*Both hard and soft ticks have the same life cycle
 +
**Egg → larva → nymph → adult
 +
 +
*Soft ticks feed little and often and on '''many hosts'''
 +
 +
 +
'''Hard ticks'''
 +
*Classified depending on the number of host species they parasitise during their life cycle
 +
 +
*Take one blood meal at each life cycle stage which lasts several days
 +
 +
*'''One-host ticks'''
 +
**Each stage feeds and develops on one host (the same host)
 +
**E.g. ''Boophillus spp.''
 +
 +
*'''Two-host ticks'''
 +
**Larvae and nymphs feed on one host
 +
**Adults feed on a second host
 +
**E.g. ''Hyalomma''
 +
 +
*'''Three-host ticks'''
 +
**Each stage feeds and develops on a different host
 +
**E.g. ''Ixodes spp.''
 +
 +
 +
==Disease transmission==
 +
 +
*'''Trans-ovarian transmission'''
 +
**Infection is passed from one generation of ticks to the next through the '''egg'''
 +
**E.g. ''Babesia''
 +
 +
*'''Trans-stadial transmission'''
 +
**Parasite or microbial organism is ingested during feeding
 +
**Organism passed onto the next host as the tick develops (only in two and three host ticks)
 +
**It is '''not''' passed onto the next generation through the egg
 +
 +
 +
<big>
 +
'''[[Hard Ticks - UK]]
 +
 +
'''[[Hard Ticks - Overseas]]
 +
 +
'''[[Soft Ticks - Overseas]]
 +
 +
'''[[Tick Control]]
 +
 +
'''[[Ticks Flashcards]]
 +
</big>
 +
       
[[Category:Arachnida]]
 
[[Category:Arachnida]]
Author, Donkey, Bureaucrats, Administrators
53,803

edits

Navigation menu