Department of Nature, Health and the Environment, University of South-Eastern Norway, Bø, Norway.
Department of Natural Sciences, University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway.
Parasit Vectors. 2021 Mar 18;14(1):161. doi: 10.1186/s13071-021-04604-w.
During the last decades a northward and upward range shift has been observed among many organisms across different taxa. In the northern hemisphere, ticks have been observed to have increased their latitudinal and altitudinal range limit. However, the elevational expansion at its northern distribution range remains largely unstudied. In this study we investigated the altitudinal distribution of the exophilic Ixodes ricinus and endophilic I. trianguliceps on two mountain slopes in Norway by assessing larval infestation rates on bank voles (Myodes glareolus).
During 2017 and 2018, 1325 bank voles were captured during the spring, summer and autumn at ten trapping stations ranging from 100 m to 1000 m.a.s.l. in two study areas in southern Norway. We used generalized logistic regression models to estimate the prevalence of infestation of both tick species along gradients of altitude, considering study area, collection year and season, temperature, humidity and altitude interactions as extrinsic variables, and host body mass and sex as intrinsic predictor variables.
We found that both I. ricinus and I. trianguliceps infested bank voles at altitudes up to 1000 m.a.s.l., which is a substantial increase in altitude compared to previous findings for I. ricinus in this region. The infestation rates declined more rapidly with increasing altitude for I. ricinus compared to I. trianguliceps, indicating that the endophilic ecology of I. trianguliceps may provide shelter from limiting factors tied to altitude. Seasonal effects limited the occurrence of I. ricinus during autumn, but I. trianguliceps was found to infest rodents at all altitudes during all seasons of both years.
This study provides new insights into the altitudinal distribution of two tick species at their northern distribution range, one with the potential to transmit zoonotic pathogens to both humans and livestock. With warming temperatures predicted to increase, and especially so in the northern regions, the risk of tick-borne infections is likely to become a concern at increasingly higher altitudes in the future.
在过去的几十年中,许多不同分类群的生物观察到了向北和向上的分布范围变化。在北半球,已经观察到蜱类增加了它们的纬度和海拔范围限制。然而,其北部分布范围的海拔扩展仍在很大程度上未被研究。在这项研究中,我们通过评估在挪威两个山坡上的嗜血性的硬蜱和嗜血性的三棘血蜱幼虫在鼩鼱(Myodes glareolus)上的侵染率,研究了嗜血性的硬蜱和嗜血性的三棘血蜱在海拔上的分布。
在 2017 年和 2018 年,在挪威南部的两个研究区域,在十个从海拔 100 米到 1000 米的捕鼠器站,于春季、夏季和秋季捕获了 1325 只鼩鼱。我们使用广义逻辑回归模型,考虑研究区域、采集年份和季节、温度、湿度和海拔相互作用作为外生变量,以及宿主体重和性别作为内在预测变量,来估计两种蜱类的侵染率在海拔梯度上的变化。
我们发现,两种硬蜱和三棘血蜱都在海拔高达 1000 米的地方侵染鼩鼱,这比该地区以前发现的硬蜱的海拔高度有了实质性的增加。与三棘血蜱相比,硬蜱的侵染率随着海拔的升高而迅速下降,这表明三棘血蜱的嗜内生态可能为其提供了免受与海拔相关的限制因素的庇护。季节效应限制了硬蜱在秋季的发生,但三棘血蜱在两年的所有季节和所有海拔高度都侵染了啮齿动物。
这项研究为两种蜱类在其北部分布范围的海拔分布提供了新的见解,其中一种硬蜱有可能将人畜共患病原体传播给人类和牲畜。随着预测的气温升高,特别是在北部地区,未来蜱传感染的风险很可能在更高的海拔地区成为一个关注点。