globalchange  > 影响、适应和脆弱性
项目编号: 1405840
项目名称:
DISSERTATION RESEARCH: Understanding the eco-epidemiology of Lyme disease in the eastern United States through investigations of Blacklegged ticks host-seeking behavior
作者: Jean Tsao
承担单位: Michigan State University
批准年: 2013
开始日期: 2014-06-01
结束日期: 2016-05-31
资助金额: USD19955
资助来源: US-NSF
项目类别: Standard Grant
国家: US
语种: 英语
特色学科分类: Biological Sciences - Environmental Biology
英文关键词: southern tick ; behavior ; host-seeking behavior ; tick ; research ; host-seeking ; nymph ; blacklegged tick ; lyme disease risk ; northern tick ; juvenile nymphal tick ; other researcher ; lyme disease incidence ; research question ; questing behavior ; human lyme disease ; northern tick population ; lyme disease ; eastern united states ; behavioral difference
英文摘要: Bites from blacklegged ticks are the cause of most human Lyme disease in the eastern United States. This tick is found throughout the region, whereas most Lyme disease is reported from the Northeast and upper Midwest. Over the past three years, field studies have revealed that this mis-match between the distribution of ticks and disease is the result, in part, of a surprising difference in the behavior of juvenile nymphal ticks. In the North, nymphs looking for a blood meal often emerge from the leaf litter and climb a convenient twig to wait for a passing mouse or bird. This puts a passing human at risk because the nymph can attach to a sock or skirt or exposed ankle and from there find a place to bite. In contrast, Southern nymphs rarely exhibit this climbing behavior because they stay in the leaf litter, and so rarely have an opportunity to attach to a passing human. This behavior appears to be genetically determined, southern ticks continue to behave like southern ticks, even if they have been raised in the North. But what if northern and southern ticks breed with each other (which other researchers have shown is possible) and how will their offspring behave? This study aims to answer that question by raising nymphs from various combinations of parents that either share or differ in their host-seeking behavior. The behavior of these hybrid offspring will be observed in order to learn about the outcomes to be expected if northern and southern ticks begin to mingle in the wild. This research question is important because northern ticks are presently expanding southwards in several states, including Ohio, Virginia, Illinois, and Indiana. Results from this research will be of value to health care providers and the public.

In prior work the PIs utilized a field reciprocal translocation experiment and found that there is a significant genetic basis to the differential host-seeking behavior of nymphs from the northern and southern parts of their range. Overall, the behavioral differences were so pronounced that they appear sufficient to explain the two-orders-of-magnitude difference in Lyme disease incidence between the northern and southeastern US. This award now allows the researchers to address a key question raised by their prior work: what questing behavior will be exhibited once northern and southern tick populations converge and hybridize? And, in what way will these host-seeking traits evolve? The PIs will conduct hybridization experiments between two northern and two southern populations, measure the fecundity of the crosses, and quantify host-seeking behavior of the resulting offspring in field arenas in both Michigan and Tennessee. The research aims to predict how Lyme disease risk will change in the South subsequent to invasion of northern tick populations into states currently occupied by southern populations. Furthermore, this project addresses classic questions regarding the role of genetics and environment on geographic variation of phenotypes and the ability of such traits to evolve.
资源类型: 项目
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/96813
Appears in Collections:影响、适应和脆弱性
气候减缓与适应

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Recommended Citation:
Jean Tsao. DISSERTATION RESEARCH: Understanding the eco-epidemiology of Lyme disease in the eastern United States through investigations of Blacklegged ticks host-seeking behavior. 2013-01-01.
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