Insects (May 2022)

Identification and Distribution of Human-Biting Ticks in Northwestern Spain

  • María Carmen Vieira Lista,
  • Moncef Belhassen-García,
  • María Belén Vicente Santiago,
  • Javier Sánchez-Montejo,
  • Carlos Pedroza Pérez,
  • Lía Carolina Monsalve Arteaga,
  • Zaida Herrador,
  • Rufino del Álamo-Sanz,
  • Agustin Benito,
  • Julio David Soto López,
  • Antonio Muro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13050469
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 469

Abstract

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Ticks transmit a wide diversity of pathogens to a great variety of hosts, including humans. We conducted a tick surveillance study in northwestern Spain between 2014 and 2019. Ticks were removed from people and identified. Tick numbers, species, development stages, the timeline, seasonal and geographical distribution and epidemiological characteristics of people bitten by ticks were studied. We collected ticks from 8143 people. Nymphs of I. ricinus were the most frequently collected. Rhipicephalus bursa, R. sanguineus s.l., Hy. marginatum, Hy. lusitanicum, D. marginatus, D. reticulatus and H. punctata were also found, with adults as the main stage. The number of collected Hyalomma spp. and R. bursa has been progressively increasing over time. Although bites occurred throughout the year, the highest number of incidents was reported from April to July. The distribution patterns of the tick species were different between the north and the south of the region, which was related to cases detected in humans of the pathogens they carried. Adult men were more likely to be bitten by ticks than women. Ticks were most frequently removed from adults from the lower limbs, while for children, they were mainly attached to the head. Epidemiological surveillance is essential given the increase in tick populations in recent years, mainly of species potentially carrying pathogens causing emerging diseases in Spain, such as Crimean–Congo hemorrhagic fever (CCFH).

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