Deer support high tick intensities, perpetuating tick populations, but they do not support tick-borne pathogen transmission, so are dilution hosts. We test the hypothesis that absence of deer (loss of a dilution host) will result in either an increase or a reduction in tick density, and that the outcome is scale dependent. We use a complementary methodological approach starting with meta-analysis, followed up by a field experiment. Meta-analysis indicated that larger deer exclosures reduce questing (host-seeking) tick density, but as the exclosure becomes smaller (,2.5 ha) the questing tick density is increased (amplified). To determine the consequences for tick-borne pathogen transmission we carried out a field experiment, comparing the i...
In large parts of the northern hemisphere, multiple deer species coexist, and management actions can...
In Europe the most important hosts maintaining Ixodes ricinus tick populations are deer. Therefore, ...
International audienceIxodes ricinus, the most common species of tick in Europe, is known to transmi...
Deer support high tick intensities, perpetuating tick populations, but they do not support tick-bor...
Abstract Background Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pa...
To better understand vector-borne disease dynamics, knowledge of the ecological interactions between...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution eff...
Tick-borne encephalitis is an emerging vector-borne zoonotic disease reported in several European an...
Tick borne encephalitis (TBE) is endemic to eastern and central Europe with broad temporal and spati...
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is an emerging zoonotic disease reported in several European and Asiat...
Background: Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pathoge...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution effect' ...
Deer tick-transmitted Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto (Lyme disease) and Babesia microti (babesio...
Background: Understanding which factors drive population densities of disease vectors is an importan...
How does wildlife loss affect tick-borne disease risk? To test this question, Titcomb et al. [1] exc...
In large parts of the northern hemisphere, multiple deer species coexist, and management actions can...
In Europe the most important hosts maintaining Ixodes ricinus tick populations are deer. Therefore, ...
International audienceIxodes ricinus, the most common species of tick in Europe, is known to transmi...
Deer support high tick intensities, perpetuating tick populations, but they do not support tick-bor...
Abstract Background Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pa...
To better understand vector-borne disease dynamics, knowledge of the ecological interactions between...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution eff...
Tick-borne encephalitis is an emerging vector-borne zoonotic disease reported in several European an...
Tick borne encephalitis (TBE) is endemic to eastern and central Europe with broad temporal and spati...
Tick-borne encephalitis (TBE) is an emerging zoonotic disease reported in several European and Asiat...
Background: Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pathoge...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution effect' ...
Deer tick-transmitted Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto (Lyme disease) and Babesia microti (babesio...
Background: Understanding which factors drive population densities of disease vectors is an importan...
How does wildlife loss affect tick-borne disease risk? To test this question, Titcomb et al. [1] exc...
In large parts of the northern hemisphere, multiple deer species coexist, and management actions can...
In Europe the most important hosts maintaining Ixodes ricinus tick populations are deer. Therefore, ...
International audienceIxodes ricinus, the most common species of tick in Europe, is known to transmi...