Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2472523 | Veterinary Parasitology | 2006 | 17 Pages |
Abstract
The present study evaluated the engorgement and drop-off rhythms of Anocentor nitens females feeding on horses. Drop-off rhythm was evaluated at 6Â h-intervals (06:00, 12:00, 18:00, and 00:00Â h) on horses held in stalls or in a pasture. A new method of marking feeding female ticks (the bowknot technique) was developed to evaluate ticks on horses in pasture that attached to different parts of the horse's body. This technique was highly successful, indicating no significant interference on tick engorgement rate or final tick weight, length and reproductive capability. Horses held in the pasture during the summer produced only 28.2% of the tick detachment during the daylight period from 06:00 to 18:00Â h. In contrast, 53.4% of the ticks detached during this same 12Â h-period during the winter. This difference was probably related to the longer scotoperiod during the winter. Different drop-off rhythms were observed for females attached to different anatomical parts of the horse's body. For example, ticks attached to the ears, perineum, and tail showed similar drop-off patterns, but were different from ticks attached to mane, rump and other body parts. The idiosoma length of the feeding female ticks was individually measured every 6Â h until the engorged female detached naturally. The engorgement rate (increase in millimeters of the body length per hour) was evaluated during the last 96Â h of parasitism. The highest engorgement rates were observed during the last 24Â h of parasitism (â0.16Â mm/h), which were four-fold higher than the engorgement rates of the previous 3 days (â0.04Â mm/h), demonstrating that these lower and higher values corresponded to the slow and rapid feeding phases reported elsewhere. Based on these data, the 6Â mm idiosoma length was estimated as the minimal length that would correspond to the time point (i.e. 24Â h before detachment) during which ticks would undergo the rapid feeding phase and detach as fully engorged females. When this 6Â mm length was tested to estimate the number of engorged females detaching from horses in a period of 24Â h, the estimated accuracy varied from 58.5 to 97.7% (mean: 73.3%).
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Authors
Marcelo B. Labruna, Marcos Amaku,