Abstract

The prevalence of infection with Lyme borreliosis spirochetes in nymphal Ixodes ricinus and Haemaphysalis punctata was examined on three Swedish islands in the Baltic Sea. The proportion of H. punctata nymphs infected with Borrelia spirochetes (≈2%) was lower than that of I. ricinus nymphs (11–16%), even on the island of Stora Karlso where both tick species feed on the single mammalian host present, the varying hare, Lepus timidus. Ten of the 12 infected questing H. punctata nymphs harboured very few spirochetes, whereas the remaining two harboured as many as 30–40 spirochetes. However, it remains to be seen whether H. punctata nymphs are capable of transmitting spirochetes during their blood meal and, thus, serving as vectors for Lyme borreliosis spirochetes. On Gotland and Faro, I. ricinus was more abundant than H. punctata in deciduous and coniferous forest, whereas H. punctata was equally or more abundant than I. ricinus in juniper brush areas on open land. Host preference and biotope usage of H. punctata seems, in general, to prevent this tick from feeding on highly infective Borrelia reservoirs, such as Apodemus mice.

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