Marquez Melissa R, Talukder Himel, Cheng Wenwen, Becker Daniel J, Wimberly Michael C, Yang Anni
Department of Geography and Environmental Sustainability, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma.
Gibbs College of Architecture, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma.
Am J Trop Med Hyg. 2025 Apr 22;113(1):187-199. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.24-0418. Print 2025 Jul 2.
Most studies on tick-borne diseases in the United States have focused on suburban and rural areas, leaving a gap in understanding risks in cities, where environmental conditions and human-tick interactions differ. Recent research has examined microhabitat effects on tick abundance but are limited in spatial and temporal scope. Tick behavior, such as host seeking, is shaped by local environmental factors and remains underexplored in urban landscapes. Integrating Earth observations of macroenvironmental and habitat conditions may improve our understanding of urban tick ecology. We hypothesize that a combination of micro- and macroenvironmental and habitat conditions predicts tick abundance in urban parks. Specifically, we expect microclimate factors (humidity and leaf litter depth) and macroconditions (habitat type and spatial arrangement) to influence questing tick abundance. In summer 2023, we collected ticks from 13 parks in the Oklahoma City metropolitan area using carbon dioxide traps and flagging techniques. Over 97% of ticks were Amblyomma americanum, a species known for aggressive host-seeking behavior. Our analysis of tick abundance in relation to microenvironmental (temperature, humidity, wind, and vegetation) and macroenvironmental (land-cover and landscape metrics) factors showed that solar radiation negatively affected tick abundance, whereas soil pH, woody vegetation, and forest cover were positive predictors. For adults, leaf litter depth and solar radiation were negative predictors, whereas woody vegetation and forest cover had positive impacts. Amblyomma americanum nymph abundance increased with humidity and soil pH. These findings underscore the complex interactions between environmental factors and tick distributions, with implications for urban health and park management.
美国大多数关于蜱传疾病的研究都集中在郊区和农村地区,这使得在了解城市中的风险方面存在空白,因为城市的环境条件和人与蜱的相互作用有所不同。最近的研究考察了微生境对蜱虫数量的影响,但在空间和时间范围上存在局限性。蜱虫的行为,如寻找宿主,受到当地环境因素的影响,在城市景观中仍未得到充分探索。整合对宏观环境和栖息地条件的地球观测可能会增进我们对城市蜱虫生态学的理解。我们假设微观和宏观环境及栖息地条件的组合可以预测城市公园中蜱虫的数量。具体而言,我们预计小气候因素(湿度和落叶层深度)和宏观条件(栖息地类型和空间布局)会影响正在 questing 的蜱虫数量。2023年夏天,我们使用二氧化碳诱捕器和标记技术,从俄克拉荷马城大都市区的13个公园收集蜱虫。超过97%的蜱虫是美洲钝缘蜱,这是一种以积极寻找宿主行为而闻名的物种。我们对蜱虫数量与微观环境(温度、湿度、风、植被)和宏观环境(土地覆盖和景观指标)因素关系的分析表明,太阳辐射对蜱虫数量有负面影响,而土壤pH值、木本植被和森林覆盖是积极的预测指标。对于成虫来说,落叶层深度和太阳辐射是负面预测指标,而木本植被和森林覆盖有积极影响。美洲钝缘蜱若虫数量随湿度和土壤pH值增加。这些发现强调了环境因素与蜱虫分布之间的复杂相互作用,对城市健康和公园管理具有重要意义。