Molecular insights into Neotropical bird-tick ecological associations and the role of birds in tick-borne disease ecology
Matthew J. Miller, Helen J. Esser, Jose R. Loaiza, Edward A. Herre,, Celestino Aguilar, Diomedes Quintero, Erick Alvarez, Eldredge Bermingham

TL;DR
This study reveals the diversity and ecological associations of immature ticks on Panamanian birds, highlighting their potential role in tick-borne disease ecology and the importance of birds as hosts in tropical regions.
Contribution
It introduces a molecular library for identifying immature ticks on birds and demonstrates the ecological specificity and diversity of tick species parasitizing Neotropical birds.
Findings
Immature ticks parasitize about 1/8th of Panamanian bird species.
Identified 11 tick species from bird hosts using molecular methods.
Birds are hosts to tick species carrying rickettsial parasites, but not the main disease vectors.
Abstract
Ticks are important vectors of emerging zoonotic diseases. While adults of many tick species parasitize mammals, immature ticks are often found on wild birds. In the tropics, difficulties in species-level identification of immature ticks hinder studies of tick ecology and tick-borne disease transmission, including any potential role for birds. In Panama, we found immature ticks on 227 out of 3,498 birds representing 93 host species, about 1/8th of the entire Panamanian terrestrial avifauna. Tick parasitism rates did not vary with temperature or rainfall, but parasitism rates did vary with host ecological traits: non-migratory residents, forest dwelling birds, bark insectivores, terrestrial foragers and lowland species were most likely to be infested with ticks. Using a molecular library developed from adult ticks specifically for this study, we identified 130 immature ticks obtained…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVector-borne infectious diseases · Viral Infections and Vectors · Mosquito-borne diseases and control
