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Voles, shrews and red squirrels as sources of tick blood meals and tick-borne pathogens on an island in southwestern Finland

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TICKS AND TICK-BORNE DISEASES
卷 14, 期 3, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2023.102134

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Ixodes ricinus; tick-borne pathogens; tick hosts; blood meal assay; blood meal source; tick-borne pathogen source

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The molecular identification of blood meal sources in ticks has been studied for several decades, but no widely used method has been established. A recent study developed qPCR assays based on retrotransposons to detect blood meal fragments in North American host species. In this study, the assays were used to identify blood meal sources and screen for tick-borne pathogens in ticks collected from Finland. The results showed that voles, shrews, and red squirrels were the main blood meal sources for Ixodes ricinus larvae, with red squirrels having the highest probability of carrying Borrelia.
Molecular identification of the previous blood meal source of a questing tick (Acari: Ixodidae) from blood meal fragments was proposed a few decades ago. Following this, several blood meal assays have been developed and published, but none of them have been taken into widespread use. Recently, novel retrotransposon-based qPCR assays designed for detecting blood meal fragments of North American host species were published. We wanted to assess their function with host species present in Finland.Questing ticks were collected by cloth dragging in August-September 2021 from an island in southwestern Finland. DNA was extracted from Ixodes ricinus nymphs (n=438) and qPCR assays applied to identify larval blood meal sources (voles, shrews and red squirrels) and screen for several tick-borne human pathogens and other microbes with pathogenic potential [Borrelia spp. (including specific assays for Borrelia afzelii, Borrelia garinii, Borrelia valaisiana), Anaplasma phagocytophilum, Babesia spp., Rickettsia spp., and Neoehrlichia mikurensis].The probability of a nymph having fed as larva on either a vole, shrew or red squirrel was 0.34 (0.30 - 0.38; 95% confidence interval). Bacteria of the genus Borrelia were the most common pathogens detected, with hostspecific probabilities of carrying Borrelia of 0.30 (0.18 - 0.44) for nymphs that had fed on voles, 0.23 (0.14 - 0.35) for nymphs that had fed on shrews, and 0.42 (0.28 - 0.58) for nymphs that had fed on red squirrels. Other microbes were rarely acquired from these hosts, apart from N. mikurensis from voles.This study highlights that shrews and red squirrels may equal voles as blood meal sources for I. ricinus larvae. Overall, variation in proportions of blood meals provided by these animals may be high across even proximate study areas. All studied host species appeared to be important sources for particularly Borrelia afzelii, and voles also for N. mikurensis.

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