Black bears may play an important role in spreading deer ticks, more widely known as blacklegged ticks, in Pennsylvania, according to researchers at Penn State.
Blacklegged ticks are the primary spreader of the pathogen that causes Lyme disease, and more than 70 percent of black bears were found to have them.
Most previous studies on tick dispersal have focused on the white-tailed deer and the white-footed mouse, but bear populations in Pennsylvania, and throughout the Northeast, have seen massive growth in numbers and range since the 1980s.
“American black bear populations in the Northeast have been rising substantially since the 1980s,” said lead researcher Hannah Tiffin, a doctoral candidate in entomology at Penn State. “Pennsylvania has seen a dramatic increase in bear numbers, with the estimated population doubling between the late 1980s and 2001 and continuing to rise in the last 20 years.”
Through roughly the same time frame, she noted, tick-borne diseases in humans have risen significantly, with the number of cases reported to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention nearly tripling between 2004 and 2017.
Lyme disease, which is caused by the bacterium Borrelia burgdorferi and is transmitted primarily by the blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis), is the most frequently reported vector-borne disease in the U.S. Pennsylvania leads the nation in reported Lyme cases.
In addition, most studies of ticks on bears have looked at hunter-killed bears, which restricted the conclusions to limited time periods in the year, generally late fall.
“To date, most wildlife studies of blacklegged ticks have looked at two species — the white-tailed deer and the white-footed mouse,” Tiffin explained. “As a result, there’s a lack of research on other animal species in terms of their role in tick dispersal, their suitability as hosts and their status as reservoirs of disease pathogens.”
In addition, standardized tick-surveillance methods have not been developed for host species that rarely are studied for tick burden and parasitism, explained study co-author Erika Machtinger, assistant professor of entomology and director of the college’s Veterinary Entomology Laboratory.
“Studies of ticks on wild mammals other than white-tailed deer and white-footed mice usually consist of opportunistic tick collections,” Machtinger said. “For instance, most previous studies of tick parasitism of black bears consisted of opportunistic collections on nuisance bears or bears killed by vehicle collisions or by hunters, which limits observations to specific times of the year.
“Because black bears are known to host several species of ticks and these animals can travel long distances — particularly male bears that may travel more than 100 miles when establishing a new territory — it’s important to understand their role in tick ecology and dispersal, especially in a region with high numbers of Lyme disease cases.”
To assess tick presence, abundance, life stage, spatial distribution and seasonality, the research team examined 278 black bears in 21 central Pennsylvania counties — from the New York border to the Maryland line — between June 2018 and December 2019.
Researchers evaluated live, sedated black bears in cooperation with annual bear population research surveys by the Pennsylvania Game Commission during the spring and summer months, as well as hunter-harvested bears brought to commission check stations during the annual statewide bear-hunting season.
In addition, the scientists surveyed other black bears for tick burden as part of a concurrent study on the health status and movement of bears with sarcoptic mange, also known as scabies, which is a skin condition caused by the Sarcoptes scabiei mite. The goal was to investigate the association between parasitism by ticks and S. scabiei.
Nearly 71 percent of bears examined had ticks present, all of which were blacklegged ticks, the researchers reported in the “International Journal for Parasitology: Parasites and Wildlife.” Of 17 body regions surveyed, locations on the bears’ head had the highest percentage of tick presence, led by the ear (39 percent) and muzzle (36 percent).
All 3 life stages of tick were found on bears during the study. The surveys indicated that the head and front-quarters of bears are more likely to be parasitized by adult ticks, while the legs and toes are more frequently parasitized by immature ticks (nymphs and larvae). In particular, the toes, a body area often overlooked in tick research on medium-sized and large mammals, were parasitized nearly exclusively by immature ticks.
“To our knowledge, this is the first report of larval blacklegged ticks being found on black bears,” Tiffin said. “Immature blacklegged ticks typically have been thought to feed primarily on small and medium-sized mammals, but our results show that immatures of this species feed on large mammal hosts as well.”
The researchers found the highest numbers of ticks found on bears in the spring, with the next highest abundance occurring in the summer, and the lowest abundance found in the fall.
“This likely relates to the blacklegged tick’s life cycle in the Northeast, with nymphs most active and abundant in the spring, larvae in the summer, and adults in the fall,” Machtinger said.
Of the 36 surveyed black bears showing clinical signs of mange, 20, or about 56 percent, had ticks present, compared to 71 percent of bears without mange that had ticks.
Although co-parasitism of sarcoptic mites and ticks on black bears had not been studied previously and further research is needed, mange can result in significant changes to the host’s skin. That may prevent or reduce successful tick attachment or may prevent ticks from finding adequate attachment sites due to bears’ hair loss and increased grooming when afflicted with mange.
The research suggests that black bears may be an important factor in tick dispersal in Pennsylvania.
“Wildlife species can be used as sentinel hosts for tick surveillance,” Tiffin said. “The role of understudied tick hosts like black bears in the ecology and spread of ticks warrants additional research as human cases of Lyme disease and other tick-borne diseases continue to rise in the United States.”
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