Sympatric occurrence of Ixodes ricinus, Haemaphysalis concinna and Haemaphysalis inermis in a wild fauna reserve

Wildlife reserves represent confined ecosystems with a high concentration of non-native animal species. The Réserve Zoologique de la Haute Touche, a unique forested environment, houses approximately 50 species, primarily Artiodactyla and Perissodactyla. We conducted a comprehensive tick survey withi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Héloïse Duchêne, Albert Agoulon, Nathalie de la Cotte, Claire Bonsergent, Maggy Jouglin, Barbara Blanc, Alice Brunet, Katia Ortiz, Suzanne Bastian, Laurence Malandrin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-07-01
Series:Ticks and Tick-Borne Diseases
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877959X2500055X
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Summary:Wildlife reserves represent confined ecosystems with a high concentration of non-native animal species. The Réserve Zoologique de la Haute Touche, a unique forested environment, houses approximately 50 species, primarily Artiodactyla and Perissodactyla. We conducted a comprehensive tick survey within the reserve in 2017, collecting ticks from vegetation by flagging (outside enclosures on 101 sampling points in May and September, inside 21 enclosures in May), by visual search outside enclosures in May, and directly on animals captured for routine veterinary interventions, over four consecutive years (2015–2018).A total of 13,038 questing ticks, representing seven species, were collected via flagging outside and inside enclosures. Ixodes ricinus (88.9%), Haemaphysalis concinna (10.1 %), and Haemaphysalis inermis (1 %) were the dominant species, with all three parasitic life stages of these species found in May. The less common species were Ixodes acuminatus (2 nymphs), Ixodes frontalis (2 nymphs), Dermacentor reticulatus (3 adults), and Dermacentor marginatus (1 adult). Ixodes ricinus was ubiquitous throughout the reserve, outside and inside enclosures, at nearly all sampling sites (100/101 and 9/21 enclosures), followed by H. concinna (78/101 sites and 6/21 enclosures) and H. inermis (49/101 sites and 1/21 enclosures). Tick densities varied greatly with peak densities reaching 1221 I. ricinus nymphs per 100 m² and 46 I. ricinus adults per 100 m² in May. Haemaphysalis concinna densities reached 124 nymphs per 100 m². Visual searches for adult ticks on vegetation revealed statistically different proportions of these three species between different areas of the reserve, with H. inermis reaching 40.5 % of the collected adults in a specific area. Enclosures housing roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) and red deer (Cervus elaphus) exhibited the highest tick abundance on vegetation. Feeding ticks, including I. ricinus (n = 53), H. concinna (n = 26), and D. reticulatus (n = 1), were collected from 15 animals of six ruminant species.This study represents the first documented sympatric occurrence of I. ricinus, H. concinna, and H. inermis in France, and the first description of Haemaphysalis species within a zoological reserve. The potential for pathogen transmission by these three generalist species and especially Haemaphysalis species (paucity of data) warrants further investigation.
ISSN:1877-9603