Ballman Elissa S, Leahy Jessica E, Sponarski Carly C, Galli Michael G, Gardner Allison M
School of Biology and Ecology, University of Maine, 5722 Deering Hall, Orono, ME 04469 United States.
School of Forest Resources, University of Maine, 5755 Nutting Hall, Orono, ME 04469 United States.
Ticks Tick Borne Dis. 2023 May;14(3):102144. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2023.102144. Epub 2023 Mar 10.
Tick-borne disease poses a growing public health burden in the United States and understanding the patterns of presence and density of infected vector ticks is key to developing and implementing effective public health management strategies. Citizen science has emerged as a highly effective means to generate data sets on the geographical distribution of tick species. But to date, nearly all citizen science studies of ticks are 'passive surveillance' programs in which researchers accept reports of ticks, together with either physical specimens or digital images, found opportunistically on people, pets, and livestock from community members for species identification and in some cases also tick-borne pathogen detection. These studies are limited because data are not collected systematically, making comparisons among locations and over time challenging, and introducing considerable reporting bias. In this study, we engaged citizen scientists in 'active surveillance' of host-seeking ticks, training volunteers to actively collect ticks on their woodland properties in an emergent region of tick-borne disease in the state of Maine, USA. We developed volunteer recruitment strategies, materials to train volunteers in data collection methods, field data collection protocols based on techniques used by professional scientists, and a variety of incentives to promote volunteer retention and satisfaction with their experiences, and we communicated research findings to participants. A total of 125 volunteers in 2020 and 181 volunteers in 2021 collected 7,246 ticks in southern and coastal Maine, including the American dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis, 4,023 specimens), the blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis, 3,092 specimens), and the rabbit tick (Haemaphysalis leporispalustris, 102 specimens). We demonstrated the feasibility of citizen scientists collecting ticks using active surveillance methods and found that volunteers were motivated to participate largely by their interest in the scientific problem and a desire to learn about ticks on their properties.
蜱传疾病给美国带来了日益沉重的公共卫生负担,了解受感染的媒介蜱的存在模式和密度是制定和实施有效的公共卫生管理策略的关键。公民科学已成为生成蜱种地理分布数据集的一种高效手段。但迄今为止,几乎所有关于蜱的公民科学研究都是“被动监测”项目,研究人员接受社区成员在人、宠物和牲畜身上偶然发现的蜱的报告,以及实物标本或数字图像,用于物种鉴定,在某些情况下还用于检测蜱传病原体。这些研究存在局限性,因为数据不是系统收集的,这使得不同地点和不同时间的比较具有挑战性,并引入了相当大的报告偏差。在本研究中,我们让公民科学家对寻找宿主的蜱进行“主动监测”,在美国缅因州蜱传疾病的一个新兴地区,培训志愿者在他们的林地中主动收集蜱。我们制定了志愿者招募策略、培训志愿者数据收集方法的材料、基于专业科学家使用的技术的实地数据收集方案,以及各种激励措施,以促进志愿者的留存率和对他们经历的满意度,并且我们将研究结果传达给了参与者。2020年共有125名志愿者,2021年有181名志愿者在缅因州南部和沿海地区收集了7246只蜱,包括美洲犬蜱(变异革蜱,4023个标本)、黑脚蜱(肩突硬蜱,3092个标本)和兔蜱(边缘血蜱,102个标本)。我们证明了公民科学家使用主动监测方法收集蜱的可行性,并发现志愿者参与的主要动机是他们对科学问题的兴趣以及了解其土地上蜱的愿望。