4.1 Article

The detection of three new Haemaphysalis ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) in Singapore and their potential threat for public health, companion animals, and wildlife

Journal

ACAROLOGIA
Volume 62, Issue 4, Pages 927-940

Publisher

ACAROLOGIA-UNIVERSITE PAUL VALERY
DOI: 10.24349/fz2l-kg9r

Keywords

ttck-borne disease; exotic tick; invasive species; Haemaphysalis wellingtoni; Haema-physalis hystricis; Haemaphysalis bispinosa

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Efforts to study the diversity and ecology of ticks and tick-borne microbes are ongoing in Singapore. In a nationwide surveillance, three previously unreported species of Haemaphysalis were discovered, including two species that infest humans. The threat posed by these tick species to human and animal health in Singapore is discussed.
Efforts to safeguard human and animal health against ticks and tick-borne diseases are principally reliant on careful surveillance. Within Singapore, the importance of ticks and tick-borne diseases is increasingly recognized. However, developing foundational knowledge of the local diversity of ticks and tick-borne microbes, as well as their ecology, is ongoing. Nation-wide surveillance efforts revealed the presence of three previously unreported species of Haemaphysalis from Singapore, namely: H. bispinosa, H. hystricis, and H. wellingtoni. All three species are known to feed on humans and appear to have established populations within Singapore. We record the first infestation of humans by H. hystricis and H. wellingtoni within Singapore and present all known local host records from these three newly detected tick species. The threat posed by these species to local public health, companion animals, and wildlife is discussed.

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