Ticks are parasitic bloodsuckers, capable of spreading deadly disease, and theyâre becoming increasingly common. Hereâs what you need to know about them.
Ticks 101
Ticks are arachnids, close cousins of mites and more distant cousins of spiders. There are more than 800 species of ticks found around the world, and 84 that have been documented in the United States. However, only a handful in the U.S. bite and transmit diseases to humans. The most common ones are blacklegged ticks (also known as deer ticks, but they feed on lots of animals besides deer), lone star ticks, American dog ticks and brown dog ticks.
After a tick egg hatches, it goes through three life stages: larva, nymph and adult. Both male and female ticks feed on blood by inserting their barbed, straw-like mouthparts into the skin of their host (unlike mosquitoes, which only bite if theyâre females preparing to lay eggs). However, only female ticks drink to the point that they become engorged.
âWhen you see a super big and engorged female, that means sheâs going to be laying eggs and starting that life cycle process over again,â said Kait Chapman, an extension educator and urban entomologist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
These arachnids change dramatically in size and appearance based on how old they are and how much blood theyâve drunk. âThe nymph blacklegged tick, if you put these unfed ones on a poppy seed bagel, they blend in quite nicely,â said Dr. Thomas Mather, a professor of public health entomology at the University of Rhode Island and director of that schoolâs Centre for Vector-Borne Disease and its TickEncounter Resource Centre. Meanwhile, an engorged adult female of the same species can swell to the size of a pea.
Tick bites and diseases
While there are some months when different species and life stages are more active, itâs possible to get bitten by a tick any time of year. If you find a tick attached to you (or your pet), you should remove it carefully.
âThe recommendation is that you use a pair of tweezers, get the tick by its head as close to the skin as possible and pull it straight out,â Chapman said. âWe donât want to twist, because we could leave part of that mouthpart embedded in the skin. And we donât want to grab the body because if you squeeze the body the tick could regurgitate more, which means that youâre increasing your chance of getting tick-borne illness.â
Your impulse might be to squash the freshly removed tick, but itâs better if you drown it with hand sanitizer or rubbing alcohol and keep it to show to an expert or at least take a photo. That way, you can identify what kind of tick it is and how long itâs been feeding; the University of Rhode Islandâs TickEncounter website has tools based on coloration, size and geographic location.
Itâs important to identify the tick because certain species carry different diseases. They pick up bacteria, viruses and other microbes from the blood of infected hosts, and when they bite a new victim, they can pass those pathogens along.
Blacklegged tick larvae and nymphs, for instance, often feed on white-footed mice, which can carry a bacterium called Borrelia burgdorferi. When a tick thatâs fed on one of these infected mice then feeds on a human, it can pass along that bacterium, which causes Lyme disease.
Lone star ticks, on the other hand, donât feed on white-footed mice and consequently arenât carriers of Lyme. (They do carry other disease-causing microbes, though, and their bites can introduce a sugar molecule into the bloodstream that makes people allergic to red meat.)
In , researchers identified a protein that appears to play a big part in how some ticks â including the deer tick and the Western blacklegged tick â get infected by the harmful bacteria Anaplasma phagocytophilum before spreading it to human hosts and causing anaplasmosis, which is different from Lyme disease.
Anaplasmosis can cause severe headaches, fever and chills, vomiting, and fatigue,
Understanding this protein may give scientists a better sense of how to stop the spread of the disease through ticks, the study said. But there is still a lot of research ahead before they get there.
Preventing tick bites
The diseases carried by ticks can be debilitating or even life-threatening, and the risk of infection increases the longer a tick has been on you. While there are some treatments available, itâs best to avoid getting bitten in the first place.
Various studies have suggested factors that could play a role in tick attraction, including a recent paper showing a in a laboratory setting. And while ticks are attracted to cues such as the carbon dioxide exhaled by animals, they tend to lie in wait rather than actively seeking out their prey.
âContrary to popular belief, they donât fall from trees. They simply sit at the edge of a tall blade of grass, for example, thatâs maybe hanging over someplace, and theyâll put their front leg out. We call that questing,â Chapman said. âThey will wait for that host to brush right by them, and so thatâs primarily how people get ticks: They brush by it; it attaches to their leg or their clothes.â
Insect repellents containing DEET, picaridin and oil of lemon eucalyptus have been to protect against ticks. However, these chemicals work differently against ticks than they do against mosquitoes.
For instance, DEET âburns the feet of ticks, and they fall off because their feet are burning,â as opposed to interfering with the tickâs ability to find its prey the way DEET affects mosquitoes, Mather said. Whatâs more, âas soon as the product is dried, it doesnât burn as much, so it really doesnât last very long for ticks.â
Instead, Chapman recommends preventing tick bites by covering your skin and tucking the bottoms of your pants into your socks. Ticks also are killed by half an hour in the dryer, so toss your clothes in as soon as you get home, even before you wash them.
Whatâs more, âwe favor wearing treated clothes with permethrin â itâs far, far more effectiveâ than bug spray, Mather said. âIt blocks nerve conduction in ticks, and it makes them hyper-excited and then they just lose function pretty quickly, and it actually ends up killing them.â Depending on where you live, he said, it might also make sense to investigate exterminating ticks living in your yard.
These precautions might seem extreme, but to Mather, theyâre the way of the future, because âwe live in a âmore ticks in more placesâ world, and more people are being exposed.â
Climate change may play some role in the spread of ticks, but Mather said he believes that the influx of the parasites has more to do with white-tailed deer becoming more common in areas where higher densities of people live. As a result, he said, âMore people are being exposed to the ticks that are reproducing on white-tailed deer.â
Despite the spread of ticks and the severity of illnesses that they can cause, Chapman stressed that with proper precautions (for you and your pets â ask your vet for tick preventatives), they shouldnât hold you hostage inside your home.
âYes, ticks exist. Yes, they can be a public health concern, but we donât want you to let ticks keep you indoors,â she said. âYou should still be able to go outside and enjoy nature, but you just have to, once again, perform those tick checks. So take a little bit of time. Do that.â