Barré N, Mauléon H, Garris G I, Kermarrec A
Institut d'Elevage et de Médecine Vétérinaire des Pays Tropicaux, CIRAD, Pointe-a-Pitre, Guadeloupe.
Exp Appl Acarol. 1991 Oct;12(3-4):163-70. doi: 10.1007/BF01193464.
Some vertebrate species in Guadeloupe are predators of free or parasitic stages of Amblyomma variegatum (Fabricius). Among birds, 1.9% of the 421 identified animals found in the stomachs of grackles (Quiscalus lugubris), 1.6% of the 364 animals found in the stomachs of free-ranging chickens, and 0.3% of the 4642 animals found in the stomach of cattle egrets (Bubulcus ibis) were A. variegatum ticks. The most efficient predator of ticks was the tropical fire ant, Solenopsis geminata, which was observed to only attack engorged stages of ticks. An average of 8% of the 564 individual ticks or batch of ticks released on the ground, mainly in a grass environment, were attacked by this ant species. Mice (Mus musculus) and mongooses (Herpestes auropunctatus) feed on engorged nymphs and female ticks. None of the 15 strains of entomophagous nematodes, genera Steinernema and Heterorhabditis, experimentally put in contact with engorged larvae and nymphs were able to parasitize them. In the laboratory, the insects Megaselia scalaris (Diptera) and Tineola sp. (Lepidoptera) were occasionally found to feed on engorged and unfed ticks, respectively.