Paper by me (+ Cooper & Rott) on Tick hazard in the South Downs National Park (UK) + how to control without reducing ecosystem health. Free-to-read in @PeerJ at: https://peerj.com/articles/17483

Funders: @britishdeersoc , @BritishEcolSoc

ABSTRACT:
Background. #SouthDowns National Park (SDNP) is UK’s most visited #NationalPark, and a focus of tick-borne #Lymedisease. UK's first presumed locally acquired cases of #TBE and #babesiosis were recorded in 2019–20. The #SouthDownsNationalPark aims to conserve wildlife and encourage recreation, so interventions are needed that reduce hazard without negatively affecting ecosystem health. To be successful these require knowledge of site hazards.

Methods. British Deer Society members submitted ticks removed from deer. Key potential intervention sites were selected and six 50 m2 transects drag-sampled per site (mostly twice yearly for 2 years). #Ticks were identified in-lab (sex, life stage, species), hazard measured as tick presence, density of ticks (all life stages, DOT), and density of nymphs (DON). Sites and habitat types were analysed for association with hazard. Distribution was mapped by combining our results with records from five other sources.

Results. A total of 87 Ixodes ricinus (all but one adults, 82% F) were removed from 14 deer (10 Dama dama; three Capreolus capreolus; one not recorded; tick burden, 1–35) at 12 locations (commonly woodland). Five key potential intervention sites were identified and drag-sampled 2015–16, collecting 623 ticks (238 on-transects): 53.8% nymphs, 42.5% larvae, 3.7% adults (13 M, 10 F). Ticks were present on-transects at all sites: I. ricinus at three (The Mens (TM); Queen Elizabeth Country Park (QECP); Cowdray Estate (CE)), Haemaphysalis punctata at two (Seven Sisters Country Park (SSCP); Ditchling Beacon Nature Reserve (DBNR)). TM had the highest DOT at 30/300 m2 (DON = 30/300 m2), followed by QECP 22/300 m2 (12/300 m2), CE 8/300 m2 (6/300 m2), and SSCP 1/300 m2 (1/300 m2). For I. ricinus, nymphs predominated in spring, larvae in the second half of summer and early autumn. The overall ranking of site hazard held for DON and DOT from both seasonal sampling periods. DBNR was sampled 2016 only (one adult H. punctata collected). Woodland had significantly greater hazard than downland, but ticks were present at all downland sites. I. ricinus has been identified in 33/37 of SDNPs 10 km2 grid squares, Ixodes hexagonus 10/37, H. punctata 7/37, Dermacentor reticulatus 1/37.

Conclusions. Mapping shows tick hazard broadly distributed across SDNP. I. ricinus was most common, but H. punctata’s seeming range expansion is concerning. Recommendations: management of small heavily visited high hazard plots (QECP); post-visit precaution signage (all sites); repellent impregnated clothing for deerstalkers; flock trials to control H. punctata (SSCP, DBNR). Further research at TM may contribute to knowledge on ecological dynamics underlying infection density and predator re-introduction/protection as public health interventions. #EcologicalResearch on H. punctata would aid control. SDNP Authority is ideally placed to link and champion policies to reduce hazard, whilst avoiding or reducing conflict between public health and ecosystem health.

#OneHealth #PlanetaryHealth #TickAware #DiseaseEcology #ConservationBiology #Acarology #MedicalEntomology #parasites #parasitology #lymedisease

Tick hazard in the South Downs National Park (UK): species, distribution, key locations for future interventions, site density, habitats

Background South Downs National Park (SDNP) is UK’s most visited National Park, and a focus of tick-borne Lyme disease. The first presumed UK autochthonous cases of tick-borne encephalitis and babesiosis were recorded in 2019–20. SDNP aims to conserve wildlife and encourage recreation, so interventions are needed that reduce hazard without negatively affecting ecosystem health. To be successful these require knowledge of site hazards. Methods British Deer Society members submitted ticks removed from deer. Key potential intervention sites were selected and six 50 m2 transects drag-sampled per site (mostly twice yearly for 2 years). Ticks were identified in-lab (sex, life stage, species), hazard measured as tick presence, density of ticks (all life stages, DOT), and density of nymphs (DON). Sites and habitat types were analysed for association with hazard. Distribution was mapped by combining our results with records from five other sources. Results A total of 87 Ixodes ricinus (all but one adults, 82% F) were removed from 14 deer (10 Dama dama; three Capreolus capreolus; one not recorded; tick burden, 1–35) at 12 locations (commonly woodland). Five key potential intervention sites were identified and drag-sampled 2015–16, collecting 623 ticks (238 on-transects): 53.8% nymphs, 42.5% larvae, 3.7% adults (13 M, 10 F). Ticks were present on-transects at all sites: I. ricinus at three (The Mens (TM); Queen Elizabeth Country Park (QECP); Cowdray Estate (CE)), Haemaphysalis punctata at two (Seven Sisters Country Park (SSCP); Ditchling Beacon Nature Reserve (DBNR)). TM had the highest DOT at 30/300 m2 (DON = 30/300 m2), followed by QECP 22/300 m2 (12/300 m2), CE 8/300 m2 (6/300 m2), and SSCP 1/300 m2 (1/300 m2). For I. ricinus, nymphs predominated in spring, larvae in the second half of summer and early autumn. The overall ranking of site hazard held for DON and DOT from both seasonal sampling periods. DBNR was sampled 2016 only (one adult H. punctata collected). Woodland had significantly greater hazard than downland, but ticks were present at all downland sites. I. ricinus has been identified in 33/37 of SDNPs 10 km2 grid squares, Ixodes hexagonus 10/37, H. punctata 7/37, Dermacentor reticulatus 1/37. Conclusions Mapping shows tick hazard broadly distributed across SDNP. I. ricinus was most common, but H. punctata’s seeming range expansion is concerning. Recommendations: management of small heavily visited high hazard plots (QECP); post-visit precaution signage (all sites); repellent impregnated clothing for deerstalkers; flock trials to control H. punctata (SSCP, DBNR). Further research at TM may contribute to knowledge on ecological dynamics underlying infection density and predator re-introduction/protection as public health interventions. Ecological research on H. punctata would aid control. SDNP Authority is ideally placed to link and champion policies to reduce hazard, whilst avoiding or reducing conflict between public health and ecosystem health.

PeerJ
‘I’d never been bitten by a tick before’: why the little blood-sucking pest is getting us into a panic

They’re hard to spot, they’re hungry and they’re spreading disease from the Highlands to urban parks: a special report on the increasing threat posed by ticks

The Guardian

Researchers Discover a New Combination Therapy Effective Against Drug-Sensitive and Resistant Parasites
Drug-resistant babesiosis may respond to a novel combination therapy, researchers say.

The treatment, which involves the antimalarial drug #tafenoquine and the anti-fungal/anti-parasite drug #atovaquone, may also provide immunity against future babesiosis infections.

The findings were published on January 3 in the Journal of Infectious Diseases.

We identified a specific combination of drugs that clears Babesia parasites effectively—including the drug-resistant parasites.
Pratap Vydyam, PhD

#Babesiosis is a tickborne illness caused by Babesia parasites that develop and multiply in red blood cells.
Its symptoms include fevers, chills, sweats, and fatigue, and in severe cases, can be life-threatening.

Incidence of the disease is rapidly rising, particularly in the Northeast.

A 2023 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warns that cases grew by 25% between 2011 and 2019.

Beyond #tick bites, babesiosis can also be spread through contaminated blood transfusions or during pregnancy or delivery if the mother is infected

https://medicine.yale.edu/news-article/babesiosis-researchers-discover-a-new-combination-therapy-effective-against-drug-sensitive-and-resistant-parasites/

Babesiosis: Researchers Discover a New Combination Therapy Effective Against Drug-Sensitive and Resistant Parasites

A combination of the antimicrobial drugs tafenoquine and atovaquone successfully cleared Babesia parasites in mouse models of human babesiosis, researchers find

Yale School of Medicine
Asturias tiene una prevalencia superior a la media europea de #babesiosis, similar a la malaria.
Un estudio del Instituto de Salud Carlos III indica una elevada seroprevalencia de esta zoonosis en pacientes anteriormente infectados con enfermedad de Lyme, que también se transmite por picadura de garrapata. Los autores señalan que esta comunidad autónoma es una zona de riesgo emergente para la babesiosis.
#AgenciaSINC
#Ciencia
#EPIDEMIOLOGÍA
#Asturies
https://www.agenciasinc.es/Noticias/Asturias-tiene-una-prevalencia-superior-a-la-media-europea-de-babesiosis-similar-a-la-malaria
Asturias tiene una prevalencia superior a la media europea de babesiosis, similar a la malaria

Un estudio del Instituto de Salud Carlos III indica una elevada seroprevalencia de esta zoonosis en pacientes anteriormente infectados con enfermedad de Lyme, que también se  transmite por picadura de garrapata. Los autores señalan que esta comunidad autónoma es una zona de riesgo emergente para la babesiosis.

Agencia SINC
"Neglected tropical diseases" are a set of infections, mostly afflicting low-income populations, that receive relatively little funding given their public health impact. Most of these are caused by eukaryotic parasites and/or spread by vectors. It's notable that the most biologically similar illnesses common in wealthy countries, like #babesiosis, are also relatively neglected in terms of public awareness and treatment/prevention options. Maybe we need a "neglected temperate diseases" category.

Researchers warn of tick-borne disease babesiosis
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Team sequences and mines genome of the pathogen Babesia duncani

'Tis the season for hiking now that spring has arrived and temperatures are on the upswing. But with hikes come insect bites and on the increase in North America is babesiosis, a malaria-like...
https://alaska-native-news.com/researchers-warn-of-tick-borne-disease-babesiosis/67934/
#babesiosis #ticks #bites #disease #north america #hiking #climate change

Researchers warn of tick-borne disease babesiosis - Alaska Native News

Team sequences and mines genome of the pathogen Babesia duncani ‘Tis the season for hiking now that spring has arrived and temperatures are on the upswing. But with hikes come insect bites and on the increase in North America is babesiosis, a malaria-like disease spread especially between May and October by a tick. Recent research […]

Alaska Native News
Scientists Sound the Alarm on Emerging Tick-Borne Disease Babesiosis
Scientists have sequenced the genome of Babesia duncani, a pathogen causing the malaria-like disease babesiosis, and identified potential inhibitors for more effective treatments.
‘Tis the season for hiking now that spring has arrived and temperatures are on the upswing. But with hikes come insect bites and on the increase in North America is babesiosis, a malaria-like disease spread especially between May and October by a tick.
https://scitechdaily.com/scientists-sound-the-alarm-on-emerging-tick-borne-disease-babesiosis/ #babesiosis #tick #disease
Scientists Sound the Alarm on Emerging Tick-Borne Disease Babesiosis

UC Riverside and Yale University team sequences and mines genome of the pathogen Babesia duncani. Scientists have sequenced the genome of Babesia duncani, a pathogen causing the malaria-like disease babesiosis, and identified potential inhibitors for more effective treatments. 'Tis the season

SciTechDaily

Tick season is upon us. Lots of potential infectious diseases including #Lyme, #Babesiosis and #RedMeat #allergy!

"In areas that are highly endemic for Lyme disease, a single prophylactic dose of doxycycline (200 mg for adults or 4.4 mg/kg for children of any age weighing less than 45 kg) may be used to reduce the risk of acquiring Lyme disease after a high-risk tick bite."

https://www.cdc.gov/ticks/tickbornediseases/tick-bite-prophylaxis.html

Lyme Disease Prophylaxis After Tick Bite | Tick-borne Diseases | Ticks | CDC

Information on ticks and tickborne disease. Provided by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Tick-borne parasite is spreading in the Northeast, CDC says
- A tick-borne illness called babesiosis is spreading in the northeastern U.S.
Many babesiosis cases are asymptomatic, but some people develop flu-like symptoms, such as fever, body aches and fatigue, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
More rarely, babesiosis can be severe and even deadly. https://www.livescience.com/tick-borne-parasite-is-spreading-in-the-northeast-cdc-says#ticks #babesiosis #parasite
Tick-borne parasite is spreading in the Northeast, CDC says

A tick-borne illness called babesiosis is spreading in the northeastern U.S.

Live Science