Eisen Lars, Eisen Rebecca J, Lane Robert S
University of California Hopland Research and Extension Center, Hopland, CA 95449, USA.
J Vector Ecol. 2004 Dec;29(2):295-308.
We compared the infestation by ixodid ticks of lizards, rodents, and birds collected simultaneously within areas representing common habitat types in Mendocino County, CA. Lizards were infested only by Ixodes pacificus Cooley and Kohls, birds by I. pacificus and Haemaphysalis leporispalustris (Packard), and rodents by I. pacificus, I. spinipalpis Hadwen and Nuttall, I. woodi Bishopp, Dermacentor occidentalis Marx, and D. variabilis (Say). Infestation by I. pacificus larvae and nymphs of lizards (Sceloporus occidentalis Baird and Girard; Elgaria spp.) and western gray squirrels (Sciurus griseus Ord) (means of 9-35 larvae and 5-6 nymphs per animal) was several times greater than for Neotoma fuscipes Baird woodrats, Peromyscus spp. mice, and birds (means of 0.9-3.5 larvae and 0-0.3 nymphs). Overall, Borrelia-refractory lizards accounted for 84% of I. pacificus larvae and 91% of nymphs collected from animals in dense woodlands. Bird species frequently utilizing tick-questing substrates such as leaf litter (guild I birds) were more heavily infested by I. pacificus subadults (5.2 larvae and 1.0 nymphs per bird) than guild IV birds with minimal perceived contact with tick-questing substrates (0.08 larvae and 0.06 nymphs per bird). Notably, guild I birds carried similar larval loads and at least 20-fold higher nymphal loads relative to woodrats and mice. Only guild IV birds carried as few I. pacificus nymphs as did these rodents. The ratios of larvae to nymphs suggest that, relative to birds, lizards, and squirrels (infested by 1.3-6.0 larvae per nymph), nocturnally active ground-dwelling rodents such as woodrats and mice are underutilized by the nymphal stage (69 to >100 larvae per nymph). The western gray squirrel and guild I-II birds (e.g., the dark-eyed junco, Junco hyemalis [L.]) were the only potential reservoirs of Borrelia burgdorferi Johnson, Schmid, Hyde, Steigerwalt, and Brenner (the causative agent of Lyme disease in North America) that were frequently infested with both I. pacificus larvae and nymphs and commonly utilized dense woodland habitats.
我们比较了在加利福尼亚州门多西诺县代表常见栖息地类型的区域内同时采集的蜥蜴、啮齿动物和鸟类身上硬蜱的感染情况。蜥蜴仅被太平洋硬蜱(Ixodes pacificus Cooley and Kohls)感染,鸟类被太平洋硬蜱和沼泽血蜱(Haemaphysalis leporispalustris [Packard])感染,啮齿动物被太平洋硬蜱、刺背硬蜱(Ixodes spinipalpis Hadwen and Nuttall)、伍氏硬蜱(Ixodes woodi Bishopp)、西方革蜱(Dermacentor occidentalis Marx)和变异革蜱(Dermacentor variabilis [Say])感染。太平洋硬蜱幼虫和若虫对蜥蜴(西部强棱蜥,Sceloporus occidentalis Baird and Girard;强棱蜥属,Elgaria spp.)和西部灰松鼠(Sciurus griseus Ord)的感染率(每只动物平均有9 - 35只幼虫和5 - 6只若虫)比对白足鼠(Neotoma fuscipes Baird)、鹿鼠属(Peromyscus spp.)小鼠和鸟类的感染率(每只动物平均有0.9 - 3.5只幼虫和0 - 0.3只若虫)高几倍。总体而言,对伯氏疏螺旋体具有抗性的蜥蜴占从茂密林地动物身上采集到的太平洋硬蜱幼虫的84%和若虫的91%。经常利用落叶层等蜱虫搜寻基质的鸟类(第I类鸟类)被太平洋硬蜱未成熟个体的感染程度(每只鸟有5.2只幼虫和1.0只若虫)比与蜱虫搜寻基质接触极少的第IV类鸟类(每只鸟有0.08只幼虫和0.06只若虫)更严重。值得注意的是,第I类鸟类携带的幼虫数量相似,且相对于白足鼠和小鼠,若虫数量至少高20倍。只有第IV类鸟类携带的太平洋硬蜱若虫数量与这些啮齿动物一样少。幼虫与若虫的比例表明,相对于鸟类、蜥蜴和松鼠(每只若虫感染1.3 - 6.0只幼虫),像白足鼠和小鼠这样夜间活动的地栖啮齿动物在若虫阶段未被充分利用(每只若虫感染69至超过100只幼虫)。西部灰松鼠和第I - II类鸟类(如暗眼灯草鹀,Junco hyemalis [L.])是伯氏疏螺旋体(Borrelia burgdorferi Johnson, Schmid, Hyde, Steigerwalt, and Brenner,北美莱姆病的病原体)的唯一潜在宿主,它们经常同时被太平洋硬蜱幼虫和若虫感染,并且通常利用茂密的林地栖息地。