The ecology of the sheep tick, Ixodes ricinus L. Distribution of the tick in relation to geology, soil and vegetation in northern England

Parasitology ◽  
1944 ◽  
Vol 35 (4) ◽  
pp. 186-196 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Milne

The present findings apply to a particular area, the four northern counties of England, and must be viewed within the limits of the data presented.Only one tick, Ixodes ricinus L., the so-called sheep tick, infests sheep and cattle in northern England. I. canisuga Johnston, alone or with I. ricinus, has been found on sheep dogs and foxes.The distribution of the sheep tick in this region is markedly discontinuous, the total infested areas including only about one-fifth of the hilly country, to which the tick is almost exclusively confined.In north-west Northumberland, tick distribution shows a significant degree of correlation with certain factors inherent in or influenced by the surface geology. Broadly speaking, where surface geology lends itself to relatively good natural drainage and soil, the grazing is relatively good and ticks are absent; and where surface geology results in relatively poor natural drainage and/or soil, the grazing is relatively poor (‘rough’) and ticks are present.No consistent correlations between soil characteristics—i.e. pH, available phosphates and potash, soil textures, mechanical analysis and soil depth—and tick distribution have been found. Nor is there a consistent correlation- between quality of natural drainage and tick distribution. The interaction of soil and natural drainage factors, however, profoundly influences the character of the vegetation layer.In the four northern counties, the same plant dominants occur on tick-infested and tick-free hill lands. Where grazing is rough ticks are usually present irrespective of whether the dominant plant is one of the rough grasses (Nardus, Molinia, Agrostis, Aira), bracken or heather; where grazing is relatively good (i.e. not rough), ticks are invariably absent.Observations on a smaller scale show that the thicker, i.e. rougher, the vegetation layer, the denser the tick population and also the thicker the vegetation layer, the thicker the basal mat. On five plots it has been shown that there is a consistent positive correlation between mat thickness and tick population density: the thicker the mat,’ the denser the tick population irrespective of whether bracken or grass is the dominant. Thus the chief controlling factor in tick distribution is the physical character of the vegetation layer.

Parasitology ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 40 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 14-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Milne

Since it is concerned with filling in certain details of a picture, long since sketched in outline, the new work in this paper permits only a somewhat disjointed summary.From a study of Ixodes ricinus L. in nature, the main new facts emerging are:(I) Unfed adults in a deep vegetation layer such as presented by rough hill or moorland pasture dominated by bents, heather or bracken. (i) Practically all inactive unfed ticks are in the underlying mat, and nearly all of these in the upper portion of the mat. This distribution does not change, summer or winter. (ii) When the tick is active its progression is practically confined to the vertical, i.e. between its niche in the mat and the vegetation tips immediately above. Random undirected movements due to certain circumstances may achieve a 0–8 in. (average 2 in.) change of position in the horizontal plane; but there is apparently no ruling urge to move in the horizontal plane. (iii) The unfed tick comes to the vegetation tips to await a host for only a limited time during the 3-month activity season. Commonly this amounts to about five periods of 4–5 days each if no host is forthcoming. Between the periods of activity it returns to the upper mat. If it stayed constantly at the tips its survival time would be much shorter than normal. (iv) From nymphs engorged in spring, adults emerge in autumn but remain inactive for a considerable period. About half of them may perish within the first 100 days after emergence. Survivors become active during the following March–June. Effective life ends when the tick, if still unfed, finally stops coming to the vegetation tips, the only position from which a host can normally be achieved. After emergence, the effective life of the unfed adult deprived of a host is less than one year; and the actual life is not much more than one year at best. Thus adults not finding a host in spring will be ineffective, i.e. die without reproducing before the next activity season.


2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (8) ◽  
pp. 974 ◽  
Author(s):  
Graeme Armstrong ◽  
Sarah Legge

Triodia spp. have been described as behaving functionally as a shrub because above ground biomass accumulates slowly over time culminating as the dominant vegetation layer. When combined with high flammability, little seed dormancy and conflicting evidence for fire induced seed germination, obligate seeding species may be more vulnerable to short fire intervals than resprouting species. This study investigated the post-fire regeneration response of the obligate seeder Triodia sp. nov. (aff. T. schinzii Henrard) in the fire prone Kimberley, Western Australia. Adult plants were destroyed by fire in experimental plots to assess the degree of regeneration from either resprouting or germination from seed due to fire. To control for the removal of adults, without fire, plants were pulled out by hand in replicate plots. Germination of Triodia sp. nov. seed from the soil seed bank was strongly induced by fire. Establishment and survival of seedlings through the first dry season was high with a small proportion of individuals flowering at this time. It is concluded that Triodia sp. nov. is resilient to the short fire intervals experienced in the Kimberley where it is a successful localised species.


1951 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 459-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Owen Evans

An investigation of the seasonal incidence of I. ricinus on cattle in N.W. Cardigani shire showed that there are normally two peaks of activity, one occurring in spring and the other in autumn. The infestation curve varied considerably from farm to farm according to the husbandry methods practised. Delayed stocking of infested pastures caused an initial higher infestation of the cattle but, except on one farm, did not prolong the infestation beyond the normal period of tick activity. A lower infestation in spring than in autumn occurred on two farms. This resulted from either the lighter stocking of the infested grazings in spring than in autumn or the partial exhaustion of unfed tick population by sheep grazing with the cattle during the spring only.There was no evidence for the occurrence of a unimodal curve of tick activity in the region studied.


2009 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter S. Searles ◽  
Diego A. Saravia ◽  
M. Cecilia Rousseaux

Several studies have evaluated many above-ground aspects of olive production, but essential root system characteristics have been little examined. The objective of our study was to evaluate root length density (RLD) and root distribution relative to soil water content in three commercial orchards (north-west Argentina). Depending on the orchard, the different drip emitter arrangements included either: (1) emitters spaced continuously at 1-m intervals along the drip line (CE-4; 4 emitters per tree); (2) 4 emitters per tree spaced at 1-m intervals, but with a space of 2 m between emitters of neighbouring trees (E-4); or (3) 2 emitters per tree with 4 m between emitters of neighbouring trees (E-2). All of the orchards included either var. Manzanilla fina or Manzanilla reina trees (5–8 years old) growing in sandy soils, although the specific characteristics of each orchard differed. Root length density values (2.5–3.5 cm/cm3) in the upper soil depth (0–0.5 m) were fairly uniform along the drip line in the continuous emitter (CE-4) orchard. In contrast, roots were more concentrated in the E-4 and E-2 orchards, in some cases with maximum RLD values of up to 7 cm/cm3. Approximately 70% of the root system was located in the upper 0.5 m of soil depth, and most of the roots were within 0.5 m of the drip line. For each of the three orchards, significant linear relationships between soil water content and RLD were detected based on 42 sampling positions that included various distances from the trunk and soil depths. Values of RLD averaged over the entire rooting zone and total tree root length per leaf area for the three orchards were estimated to range from 0.19 to 0.48 cm/cm3 and from 1.8 to 3.5 km/m2, respectively. These results should reduce the uncertainty associated with the magnitude of RLD values under drip irrigation as intensively managed olive orchards continue to expand in established and new growing regions.


2005 ◽  
Vol 10 (13) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Daniel ◽  
B Kriz ◽  
V Danielová ◽  
J Materna ◽  
N Rudenko ◽  
...  

In the Czech Republic, there has been an increase in the tick population (Ixodes ricinus) at altitudes over 700m above sea level


2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (1) ◽  
pp. 55
Author(s):  
Khalid Fathi Ubeid ◽  
Khaled Ahmed Ramadan

<p>Determination of natural radioactivity has been carried out in surface and core agricultural soil samples collected from various sites in the Middle Governorate – Gaza Strip, Palestine. Mechanical and chemical analysis has been done to determine soil characteristics. Radon activity concentration measurements were carried out using solid state nuclear tracks detectors, Cr-39. The mechanical analysis results show that they belong to two classes, sandy loam and loamy sand. The sandy loam soil was observed in the eastern side of the study area, whereas the loamy sand was observed in western and middle parts. The radon concentration levels were higher in core samples and were proportionate to the soil depth. Also they were higher in sandy loam than loamy sand soil samples. The radon concentration levels had a positive correlation with fine grains (clay- to silt-size) of soil sample which translocated from upper to lower horizons of soil during its development. Additionally, there was a positive correlation with pH and water content, whereas a negative correlation was observed with organic matter and potassium contents. The positive correlation referred to a large specific surface of fine grains which were located in lower horizons of soil and were able to adsorb more water and consequently led to high radon concentration levels.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorota Dwużnik-Szarek ◽  
Ewa Julia Mierzejewska ◽  
Anna Bajer

Abstract Background Two populations of Dermacentor reticulatus ticks (Western and Eastern) in Poland are among the most dynamic tick populations in Central Europe. Expansion and settlement of ticks in new localizations depend on the presence of suitable hosts, for both adult and juvenile ticks. Methods The current study was planned to complement our previous studies on questing adult ticks and was focused on a collection of juvenile D. reticulatus ticks from rodents from three regions in Poland, defined by the presence/absence of adult ticks (regions of the Western and Eastern tick population and the gap area between them) to confirm the existence of stable populations. Rodent trapping was conducted in open habitats (fallow lands, wasteland and submerged meadows) in 2016–2018 in June, July and/or August to encompass seasonal peaks of larvae and nymph activity. Results Altogether, three tick species were collected, 2866 D. reticulatus, 2141 Ixodes ricinus and 427 Haemaphysalis concinna. Dermacentor reticulatus was the most common (72.3%) and abundant (mean 17.94 ± 2.62 ticks/rodent) tick species on rodents from the Eastern region; in the Western region infestation of rodents was only 6.8%. Ixodes ricinus was found in all three regions and was the only tick species collected from rodents from the gap area. Haemaphysalis concinna was noted only in the Western region. The highest infestation of juvenile D. reticulatus was recorded on voles (Myodes and Microtus spp.), infestation of I. ricinus was the highest on Apodemus mice, and the majority of H. concinna ticks were collected from root voles Alexandromys oeconomus. Conclusions Our study confirmed a stable population of D. reticulatus in Eastern and Central Poland and a lower prevalence and mean abundance of this tick species among rodents from the Western region. A lack of juvenile D. reticulatus on rodents in Niewiadów confirmed the existence of the gap area, free of D. reticulatus ticks. Graphical abstract


Parasitology ◽  
1950 ◽  
Vol 40 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 35-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Milne

Spatial distribution is understood to connote distribution of density (including zero density) over the land surface at a given time. Combining fact and conjecture, the following is a theory of spatial distribution of Ixodes ricinus in Britain. The tick passes practically the whole of its 3-year life span on the ground, spending a total of only 3 weeks on hosts. A considerable amount of vegetational cover is necessary for efficient survival on the ground; the more important limiting circumstances in lesser cover seem to be humidity (conditioned by temperature) in summer, perhaps temperature (alone) in winter, and the activity of predators. A host is necessary for mating as well as food purposes. Though small at best, the tick's chances of achieving a host are greater the more hosts on the ground. In practice this means the more sheep, since the latter are by far the main hosts. For the most part, spatial distribution to-day can be explained adequately in terms of interplay between amount of ground-cover and of host-potential, with cover the master factor. Thus poor cover keeps the heavily stocked lowland pastures free of permanent tick population even when opportunity of colonization is offered. The tick is confined to the hills and moorlands with their deep vegetation layers. There, within limits, it is more numerous on a pasture the more universal the distribution of adequate cover (because it drops at random from the host) and the higher the host-potential. Among hill and moorland pastures, however, there are some cases where, despite ample cover and hostpotential, either (1) no ticks are present, or (2) the tick population is lower than it ought to be. These cases can be explained on grounds of lack of opportunity for colonization (1); or colonization so recent that population has not attained the level of ‘dynamic equilibrium’ with the environment (2). The question of ‘spread’ (colonization) is discussed fully in the text. The sheep flock is the main agent in spreading ticks. Spread is comparatively slow and relatively small in extent nowadays. There has very probably been considerable increase both in tick population densities and in infested areas since the advent of intensive hill and moorland grazing with farm stock some centuries ago.


1996 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 721 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.M Driessen ◽  
S.A Mallick ◽  
G.J Hocking

The habitat requirements of the eastern barred bandicoot, Perameles gunnii, in Tasmania were investigated with road-kill survey data and by mapping habitat features along survey routes. Road-kills of eastern barred bandicoots were most numerous in the South-east and North-west, less common in the North-east and Midlands, and very uncommon on the East Coast. Logistic regression of bandicoot presencelabsence data suggested that traffic volume is the major determinant of the road-kill distribution of eastern barred bandicoots around Tasmania. Along with traffic volume, rainfall was found to be strongly associated with the presence of eastern barred bandicoot road-kills for the state combined and for the South-east and Northeast, while along the Huon Highway in the South-east, soil depth was associated with the presence of roadkills. Favoured habitat of the eastem barred bandicoot is high-quality agricultural land with deep soils and high rainfall. It is hypothesised that clearing for agriculture in south-eastem, north-eastem and north-westem Tasmania has opened up previously unsuitable, heavily forested habitat for colonisation by eastern barred bandicoots. The resulting mosaic of pasture and remnant bush appears to provide ideal habitat for the eastern barred bandicoot. However, the majority of bandicoot habitat is found on private land, making the species vulnerable to changes in farming practices. Possible management options are briefly discussed.


1979 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 481-488 ◽  
Author(s):  
Burton G. Burton-Bradley

Arecaidinism, or betel-nut habituation, has existed since earliest recorded times. The custom is restricted to a large area to the north and north-west of Australia and enters into the daily life of well over 200 million people. The impropriety of interfering with other people's customs, however, has not prevented the imposition of alien values and many believe the practice must be stopped. The arguments advanced against arecaidinism are ostensibly esthetic, addictive and oncogenic in nature, but may have other origins. An account is given of the history, pharmacology, economic aspects, culture functions, psychiatric implications, and an alleged relationship to oral carcinoma in the associated research, all of which indicate a complex habit deeply rooted in the daily living of the peoples concerned. It is inextricably interwoven with the overall patterning of the psychological, social, cultural and economic behaviour. On the evidence there can be little doubt that the betel chewing mixture is a fairly harmless stimulant and addictive agent and that the esthetic and oncogenic arguments remain unsupported by studies with any significant degree of scientific rigour at the present time. The antagonists should look more deeply into their own underlying motivations, the true state of their knowledge and, in the unlikely event of their programs being successful, should ask themselves what is likely to take its place.


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