Deer tick-transmitted Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto (Lyme disease) and Babesia microti (babesiosis) increasingly burden public health across eastern North America. The white-footed mouse is considered the primary host for subadult deer ticks and the most important reservoir host for these and other disease agents. Local transmission is thought to be modulated by less reservoir-competent hosts, such as deer, diverting ticks from feeding on mice. We measured the proportion of mouse-fed or deer-fed host-seeking nymphs from 4 sites during 2 transmission sea-sons by blood meal remnant analysis using a new retrotransposon-based quantitative PCR (qPCR) assay. We then determined the host that was associated with the in-fection status of the ti...
Background: Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pathoge...
Background. In the northern hemisphere, ticks of the Ixodidae family are vectors of diseases such as...
Deer support high tick intensities, perpetuating tick populations, but they do not support tick-bor...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution eff...
Lyme disease is the most common vector-borne illness in the United States. This disease is caused by...
Abstract Background Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pa...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution effect' ...
The prevalence of tick-borne diseases has been increasing in the United States for the past couple d...
Efforts to identify wildlife reservoirs for tick-borne pathogens are frequently limited by poor unde...
Tick-borne disease cases are on the rise in the USA. In Pennsylvania, multiple tick-borne pathogens ...
Abstract. To determine whether the presence of nonpathogenic piroplasms may confound field estimates...
Powassan virus lineage 2 (deer tick virus) is an emergent threat to American public health, causing ...
To better understand vector-borne disease dynamics, knowledge of the ecological interactions between...
Tick-borne encephalitis is an emerging vector-borne zoonotic disease reported in several European an...
Tick-borne pathogens such as species of Borrelia, Babesia, Anaplasma, Rickettsia, and Ehrlichia are ...
Background: Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pathoge...
Background. In the northern hemisphere, ticks of the Ixodidae family are vectors of diseases such as...
Deer support high tick intensities, perpetuating tick populations, but they do not support tick-bor...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution eff...
Lyme disease is the most common vector-borne illness in the United States. This disease is caused by...
Abstract Background Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pa...
An inverse relationship between biodiversity and human health has been termed the 'dilution effect' ...
The prevalence of tick-borne diseases has been increasing in the United States for the past couple d...
Efforts to identify wildlife reservoirs for tick-borne pathogens are frequently limited by poor unde...
Tick-borne disease cases are on the rise in the USA. In Pennsylvania, multiple tick-borne pathogens ...
Abstract. To determine whether the presence of nonpathogenic piroplasms may confound field estimates...
Powassan virus lineage 2 (deer tick virus) is an emergent threat to American public health, causing ...
To better understand vector-borne disease dynamics, knowledge of the ecological interactions between...
Tick-borne encephalitis is an emerging vector-borne zoonotic disease reported in several European an...
Tick-borne pathogens such as species of Borrelia, Babesia, Anaplasma, Rickettsia, and Ehrlichia are ...
Background: Identifying the mechanisms driving disease risk is challenging for multi-host pathoge...
Background. In the northern hemisphere, ticks of the Ixodidae family are vectors of diseases such as...
Deer support high tick intensities, perpetuating tick populations, but they do not support tick-bor...