How to translate text using browser tools
12 July 2023 Evidence of Protozoan and Bacterial Infection and Co-Infection and Partial Blood Feeding in the Invasive Tick Haemaphysalis longicornis in Pennsylvania
Keith J. Price, Noelle Khalil, Bryn J. Witmier, Brooke L. Coder, Christian N. Boyer, Erik Foster, Rebecca J. Eisen, Goudarz Molaei
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

The Asian longhorned tick, Haemaphysalis longicornis, an invasive tick species in the United States, has been found actively host-seeking while infected with several human pathogens. Recent work has recovered large numbers of partially engorged, host-seeking H. longicornis, which together with infection findings raises the question of whether such ticks can reattach to a host and transmit pathogens while taking additional bloodmeals. Here we conducted molecular blood meal analysis in tandem with pathogen screening of partially engorged, host-seeking H. longicornis to identify feeding sources and more inclusively characterize acarological risk. Active, statewide surveillance in Pennsylvania from 2020 to 2021 resulted in the recovery of 22/1,425 (1.5%) partially engorged, host-seeking nymphal and 5/163 (3.1%) female H. longicornis. Pathogen testing of engorged nymphs detected 2 specimens positive for Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato, 2 for Babesia microti, and 1 co-infected with Bo. burgdorferi s.l. and Ba. microti. No female specimens tested positive for pathogens. Conventional PCR blood meal analysis of H. longicornis nymphs detected avian and mammalian hosts in 3 and 18 specimens, respectively. Mammalian blood was detected in all H. longicornis female specimens. Only 2 H. longicornis nymphs produced viable sequencing results and were determined to have fed on black-crowned night heron, Nycticorax nycticorax. These data are the first to molecularly confirm H. longicornis partial blood meals from vertebrate hosts and Ba. microti infection and co-infection with Bo. burgdorferi s.l. in host-seeking specimens in the United States, and the data help characterize important determinants indirectly affecting vectorial capacity. Repeated blood meals within a life stage by pathogen-infected ticks suggest that an understanding of the vector potential of invasive H. longicornis populations may be incomplete without data on their natural host-seeking behaviors and blood-feeding patterns in nature.

Keith J. Price, Noelle Khalil, Bryn J. Witmier, Brooke L. Coder, Christian N. Boyer, Erik Foster, Rebecca J. Eisen, and Goudarz Molaei "Evidence of Protozoan and Bacterial Infection and Co-Infection and Partial Blood Feeding in the Invasive Tick Haemaphysalis longicornis in Pennsylvania," Journal of Parasitology 109(4), 265-273, (12 July 2023). https://doi.org/10.1645/22-122
Published: 12 July 2023
KEYWORDS
Babesia microti
Borrelia burgdorferi
Co-infection
Haemaphysalis longicornis
mid-Atlantic United States
Partial blood meal
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top