tick collection criteria project title michael cherry| dr. ben clarke| bridges and pathways program...

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TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

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Page 1: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

TICK COLLECTION CRITERIAProject title

Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

Page 2: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

TICK COLLECTION• What criteria and procedures should be

used when collecting ticks in the ‘wild’?

Page 3: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

PROJECT OVERVIEW• Where ticks are located

• Survey techniques should be consistent

• Use of standardized equipment

• Integrity of Data Collection Criteria and methods of recording

Page 4: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

WHERE ARE TICKS LOCATED IN THE MIDWEST?• Near or in deciduous forests

• Dry to mesic (moderate moisture) forests

• Alfisol-type soils of sandy or loam-sand textures overlying sedimentary rock

• Along ecotones (boundaries between varying ecosystems)

Page 5: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

ALFISOL SOILS• Alfisols are a soil order in

USDA soil taxonomy. Alfisols form in semiarid to humid areas, typically under a hardwood forest cover. They have a clay-enriched subsoil and relatively high native fertility. "Alf" refers to Aluminium (Al) and Iron (Fe).

Alfisol from East Tennessee. http://www.uamont.edu/facultyweb/francis/soilprofiles/soilprofilepage.htm

Page 6: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

WHERE ARE TICKS NOT LOCATED IN THE MIDWEST?• Near coniferous forests

• Grasslands

• Wet and very damp forests

• Acidic soils of low fertility and a clay soil texture

• Precambrian bedrock

Page 7: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

CONSTRUCTION OF DRAGGING EQUIPMENT– 70 x 90cm piece of light-colored corduroy

– 1cm diameter wooden dowel along leading edge

– Steel rod sewn into trailing edge for added weight

– Rope or wood handle to allow front edge of ‘sheet’ to contact vegetation

Page 8: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

COLLECTION TECHNIQUES FROM SCHULZE/JORDAN• Same individual should perform the dragging for

consistency– Speed, height

• Collected hourly from 0600 – 2100 hours

• 100m long transects, collect every 10m to prevent ticks from falling off

• Ramdomize dragging order, direction of travel, location within each transect (left, right, center) to minimize repeated dragging of same areas

• Minimize dew collection by drying on running pickup truck hood– To minimize effects of moisture on tick collection

Page 9: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

STATISTICS• For each sampling event (each hour) (use

of Weather Station):– Ambient Temperature

– Ambient Humidity

– Place Weather Station in center of area, 1m above vegetation height

– Litter temperature and humidity (digital thermometer)

• At least 2.5cm below leaf litter surface but not into the soil

Page 10: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS• Use of repeated measures of analysis of variance

• Use of multiple linear regression to examine relationships

• Use separate regressions for each species

• Tolerance value of 0.1 is acceptable

• Calculate temp gradient: subtract hourly litter temp from ambient

• Calculate humidity gradient: subtract litter H from ambient H

• Use Pearson correlation and linear regression to determine relationships between calculated gradients and numbers of questing ticks

Page 11: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

CONCLUSION• Consistency regarding the gathering of

ticks and in measuring and recording statistics are critical to success

Page 12: TICK COLLECTION CRITERIA Project title Michael Cherry| Dr. Ben Clarke| Bridges and Pathways Program 2010

WORKS CITED• Meteorologically Mediated Diurnal

Questing of Ixodes Scapularis and Amblyomma Americanum Nymphs – Terry Schulze and Robert Jordan Journal of Medical Entomology (2003)

• Distribution of the Common Tick, Ixodes ricinus, in different vegetation types in Southern Sweden – Anders Lindstrom and Thomas Jaenson, Journal of Medical Entomology (2003)