S2 Data -

Although human exposure to the ticks that transmit Lyme-disease bacteria is widely considered to occur around people’s homes, most studies of variation in tick abundance and infection are undertaken outside residential areas. Consequently, the patterns of variation in risk of human exposure to tick-borne infections in these human-dominated landscapes are poorly understood. Here, we report the results of four years of sampling for tick abundance, tick infection, tick encounters, and tick-borne disease reports on residential properties nested within six neighborhoods in Dutchess County, New York... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Felicia Keesing
Emma Tilley
Stacy Mowry
Sahar Adish
William Bremer
Shannon Duerr
Andrew S. Evans Jr.
Ilya R. Fischhoff
Fiona Keating
Jennifer Pendleton
Ashley Pfister
Marissa Teator
Richard S. Ostfeld
Dokumenttyp: Dataset
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Schlagwörter: Medicine / Microbiology / Ecology / Immunology / Infectious Diseases / Virology / Environmental Sciences not elsewhere classified / Biological Sciences not elsewhere classified / suggesting hot spots / small (~ 1 / ixodes scapularis </ / cold spots occurring / div >< p / three common tick / borne disease reports / natural variation within / although human exposure / reduce tick abundance / borne disease / three types / human exposure / disease bacteria / borne pathogens / borne infections / borne diseases / within neighborhoods / tick project / tick abundance / widely considered / unique dataset / spatial variation / spatial scale / residential areas / randomly assigned / poorly understood / placebo controls / outdoor pets / new york / negatively correlated / human behavior / high incidence / either human / dutchess county / dominated landscapes / differ significantly
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26676475
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293820.s002

Although human exposure to the ticks that transmit Lyme-disease bacteria is widely considered to occur around people’s homes, most studies of variation in tick abundance and infection are undertaken outside residential areas. Consequently, the patterns of variation in risk of human exposure to tick-borne infections in these human-dominated landscapes are poorly understood. Here, we report the results of four years of sampling for tick abundance, tick infection, tick encounters, and tick-borne disease reports on residential properties nested within six neighborhoods in Dutchess County, New York, USA, an area of high incidence for Lyme and other tick-borne diseases. All properties were within neighborhoods that had been randomly assigned as placebo controls in The Tick Project; hence, none were treated to reduce tick abundance during the period of investigation, providing a unique dataset of natural variation within and between neighborhoods. We estimated the abundance of host-seeking blacklegged ticks ( Ixodes scapularis ) in three types of habitats on residential properties–forests, lawns, and gardens. In forest and lawn habitats, some neighborhoods had consistently higher tick abundance. Properties within neighborhoods also varied consistently between years, suggesting hot spots and cold spots occurring at a small (~ 1-hectare) spatial scale. Across neighborhoods, the abundance of nymphal ticks was explained by neither the amount of forest in that neighborhood, nor by the degree of forest fragmentation. The proportion of ticks infected with three common tick-borne pathogens did not differ significantly between neighborhoods. We observed no effect of tick abundance on human encounters with ticks, nor on either human or pet cases of tick-borne diseases. However, the number of encounters between ticks and outdoor pets in a neighborhood was negatively correlated with the abundance of questing ticks in that neighborhood. Our results reinforce the need to understand how human behavior and neglected ecological factors ...