4.2 Article

Ticks on small mammals from an ecotone region impacted by rural activities in Brazil

Journal

SYSTEMATIC AND APPLIED ACAROLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 427-437

Publisher

SYSTEMATIC & APPLIED ACAROLOGY SOC LONDON, NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM
DOI: 10.11158/saa.26.2.7

Keywords

tick fauna; rodents; marsupials; Amblyomma; Ornithodoros; Ixodes

Categories

Funding

  1. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior -Brasil [001]

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This study evaluated the role of small mammal communities from different areas in a Brazilian tropical savanna in maintaining tick fauna. The findings suggest that forested habitats, especially riparian forests, lead to more hosts and tick infestation, with higher capture success in the dry season.
We evaluated the role of communities of small mammals from three distinct areas in a region of Cerrado mixed with Atlantic Forest remains for maintenance of tick fauna. Thirty-nine marsupials (Gracilinanus agilis, n = 34; Marmosa paraguaiana, n = 4; Didelphis albiventris, n = 1) and 33 rodents (Oecomys cleberi, n = 10; Nectomys squamipes, n = 4; Calomys tener, n = 4; Hylaeamys megacephalus, n = 4; Akodon sp., n = 3; Rattus rattus, n = 3; Cerradomys subflavus, n = 2; Mus musculus, n = 2; Rhipidomys macrurus, n = 1) were captured. Solely G. agilis and the four rodent species (N. squamipes, R. macrurus, C. subflavus and Akodon sp.) were infested. Four tick species were collected (Amblyomma dubitatum, Amblyomma sculptum, Ixodes loricatus and Ornithodoros mimon). A. dubitatum was the most abundant tick species on hosts. Capture success was higher in the dry season, but the infestation was similar in both seasons. Forested habitats, particularly riparian forests, resulted in higher number of hosts and ticks collected (from hosts and from vegetation), compared to pastures and anthropized sites. The association between C. subflavus and I. loricatus and between A. dubitatum and N. squamipes observed here is the first recorded in Cerrado biome. Areas with more patches of forest, including the Atlantic Forest fragments, tend to present a richest community of small mammals and associated ticks.

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