Abstract

Hyalomma marginatum Koch is one of the main tick vectors of human and animal tick-borne diseases. The objective of this study was to establish standard procedures for rearing H. marginatum under laboratory conditions. Such laboratory tick populations are required to study acaricide resistance of Hyalomma ticks. In our rearing program, larvae and nymphs were fed on New Zealand white rabbits, whereas adults were fed on sheep. Non-parasitic stages were held at 18 and 28 °C to study the effect of temperature on development and survival. In our experiments, H. marginatum ticks have maintained the characteristics of a two-host life cycle. The engorged larvae did not detach and moulted on the rabbit, after which the emerged nymphs continued to feed on the same animal. The life cycle duration of H. marginatum was influenced by temperature, with each non-parasitic stage—i.e., larva and nymph molting—developing faster at 28 than at 18 °C; preoviposition and oviposition periods were shorter at 28 than at 18 °C. At 18 °C, no eggs hatched. The whole cycle from the collection of an engorged field tick until the emergence of second-generation larvae took 189 days. One such tick on average results in 3500 eggs which over time, taking into account the losses at each developmental stage, develop into 1200 adult ticks. Rearing these ticks a second generation therefore could result in millions of larval ticks.

Highlights

  • Tick borne-diseases are a permanent threat to human and animal health worldwide

  • Since the research conducted by Ouhelli (1994), no results have been published on the rearing of Hyalomma ticks under laboratory conditions in Morocco

  • The objective of the present study is to investigate the rearing of H. marginatum under laboratory conditions and to establish standard procedures for producing H. marginatum laboratory colonies

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Summary

Introduction

Tick borne-diseases are a permanent threat to human and animal health worldwide. In Morocco, a total of 28 tick species including 15 hard ticks with seven species of the genus Hyalomma are widely distributed and known to transmit various diseases in cattle. Hyalomma marginatum Koch is widespread in various agro-climatic regions of Morocco (Bailly-Choumara et al 1976; Ouhelli and Pandey 1982; Walker et al 2003) It is a twohost tick with adults feeding on large mammals such as livestock and wild ungulates, whereas the larvae and nymphs feed on small mammals and ground-dwelling birds (Apanaskevich and Horak 2008; Santos-Silva and Vatansever 2017). This tick species is very competent in the transmission of bovine tropical theileriosis caused mainly by Theileria annulata (Jongejan et al 1983; Sayin et al 2003) and piroplasmosis in Morocco (Seng et al 2009; Hamou et al 2012). Since the research conducted by Ouhelli (1994), no results have been published on the rearing of Hyalomma ticks under laboratory conditions in Morocco

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