There HEEEEEEREEEEE… Found two on the dog yesterday, not just little brown ones, but nice big juicey gray ones!!!
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The woodticks are out!!!
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March 31, 2007 at 2:35 pm #555389
Hey Steve!
I pulled our first tick off the hound just this week as well. The wife found it and started shrieking. That didn’t help the dog calm down any so I could remove it.
Hopefully they stay off the kids
Curt
bigpikePosts: 6259March 31, 2007 at 3:12 pm #555396Got a new little pup girl, took her for a run in the woods last week and she had them also….
March 31, 2007 at 4:50 pm #555429I was out looking for sheds this past weekend and found a plenty of ticks! Tiny little brown jobs.
March 31, 2007 at 6:00 pm #555437even down here spring has sprung a bit early, I always get into a swarm of them while out morrel hunting, and I think this year things will be happening even earlier than last year. My kids don’t hunt with me any more b/c of ticks.
March 31, 2007 at 6:06 pm #555440They are out here in the north as well. It is just a part of life. Take care of you and your dog everyday you are in the yard.
Mark
March 31, 2007 at 7:52 pm #554516had two on me from a shed hunt on wed!!! They are HEEEEEEEEEEERRRRRRRRREEEEE
April 2, 2007 at 6:02 pm #556004Pulled one out of me on Sunday a.m. after what I assume was moving wood around the yard on Sat. Changed clothes at night, but didn’t do the body check. Nice purple welt going on and looking for a ring. Hope it doesn’t show.
Mark
April 2, 2007 at 7:10 pm #556025Quote:
I was out looking for sheds this past weekend and found a plenty of ticks! Tiny little brown jobs.
The tiny ones are the deer ticks. They are the nasty buggers full of Lime’s disease.
April 2, 2007 at 7:16 pm #556029We did this last year too.
Life cycle
Deer (black-legged) tick
Deer tickThe deer (or black-legged) tick, and the related western black-legged tick, are the primary known transmitters of Lyme disease, an infectious disease. Both are hard-bodied ticks with a two-year life cycle. Like all species of ticks, deer ticks and their relatives require a blood meal to progress to each successive stage in their life cycles.
The life cycle of the deer tick comprises three growth stages: the larva, nymph and adult. In both the northeastern and mid-western U.S., where Lyme disease has become prevalent, it takes about two years for the tick to hatch from the egg, go through all three stages, reproduce, and then die. A detailed description of this life cycle and the seasonal timing of peak activity, as they occur in these regions, is provided below.
Larva
Eggs laid by an adult female deer tick in the spring hatch into larvae later in the summer. These larvae reach their peak activity in August. No bigger than a newsprint period, a larva will wait on the ground until any sized animal or mammal (ranging from a mouse to a cat, dog, deer, and so on), human, or bird brushes up against it. The larva then attaches itself to its host, begins feeding, and engorges with blood over several days.If the host is already infected with the Lyme disease spirochete from previous tick bites, the larva will likely become infected as well. In this way, infected hosts in the wild (primarily white-footed mice, which exist in large numbers in Lyme-endemic areas of the northeast and upper mid-west) serve as spirochete reservoirs, infecting ticks that feed upon them. Other mammals and ground-feeding birds may also serve as reservoirs.
Because deer tick larvae are not born infected, it is believed that they cannot transmit Lyme disease to their human hosts. Instead, “reservoir” hosts, as mentioned above, can infect the larvae. Having already fed, an infected larva will not seek another host, human or otherwise, until after it reaches the next stage in its life cycle. It is not completely known whether larvae, in themselves, pose a threat to humans or their pets.
Nymph
Most larvae, after feeding, drop off their hosts and molt, or transform, into nymphs in the fall. The nymphs can remain inactive throughout the winter and early spring.In May, nymphal activity begins. Host-seeking nymphs wait on vegetation near the ground for a small mammal or bird to approach. The nymph will then latch on to its host and feed for 4 or 5 days, engorging with blood and swelling to many times its original size. If previously infected during its larval stage, the nymph may transmit the Lyme disease spirochete to its host. If not previously infected, the nymph may become infected if its host carries the Lyme disease spirochete from previous infectious tick bites. In highly endemic areas of the northeast, at least 25% of nymphs have been found to harbor the Lyme disease spirochete.
It may happen that humans become the hosts of infected nymphs during their peak spring and summer activity. Although the nymphs’ preferred hosts are small mammals and birds, humans and their pets are suitable substitutes. Because nymphs are about the size of a poppy seed, they often go unnoticed until fully engorged, and are therefore responsible for the majority of human Lyme disease cases.
Adult
Male tickOnce engorged, the nymph drops off its host into the leaf litter and molts into an adult. These adults actively seek new hosts throughout the fall, waiting up to 3 feet above the ground on stalks of grass or leaf tips to latch onto deer (its preferred host) or other larger mammals (including humans, dogs, cats, horses, and other domestic animals). Peak activity for adult deer ticks occurs in late October and early November. Of adults sampled in highly endemic areas of the northeast, at least 50% have been found to carry the Lyme disease spirochete.
As winter closes in, adult ticks, unsuccessful in finding hosts, take cover under leaf litter or other surface vegetation, becoming inactive when covered by ice and snow. Generally, winters in the northeast and upper mid-west are cold enough to keep adult ticks at bay until late February or early March but not when temperatures begin to rise. At this time, they resume the quest for hosts in a last-ditch effort to obtain a blood meal allowing them to mate and reproduce. This second activity peak typically occurs in March and early April.
Adult female ticks that attach to deer, whether in the fall or spring, feed for approximately one week. Males feed only intermittently. Mating may take place on or off the host, and is required for the female’s successful completion of the blood meal. The females then drop off the host, become gravid, lay their eggs underneath leaf litter in early spring, and die. Each female lays approximately 3,000 eggs. The eggs hatch later in the summer, beginning the two-year cycle anew.
Example species
Male tick size comparison to a match.Dermacentor variabilis, the American dog tick, is perhaps the most well-known of the North American hard ticks. This tick does not carry Lyme disease, but can carry Rocky Mountain spotted fever.
Ixodes scapularis (formerly Ixodes dammini), known as the black-legged tick or deer tick, is common to the eastern part of North America and is known for spreading Lyme disease.
Ixodes pacificus, the Western black-legged tick, lives in the western part of North America and is responsible for spreading Lyme disease and the more deadly Rocky Mountain spotted fever. It tends to prefer livestock as its adult host.
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