The weather determines the number of cases of tick paralysis in dogs and cats in eastern Australia, caused by Ixodes holocyclus, the eastern paralysis tick

Author:

Teo EJM1ORCID,Russell H2,Lambert T2,Webster R3,Yappa A3,McDonagh P4ORCID,Harper G4,Barker D5ORCID,Barker SC1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Parasitology, School of Chemistry & Molecular Biosciences The University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland 4072 Australia

2. Northside Emergency Veterinary Service Terrey Hills New South Wales 2084 Australia

3. Animal Emergency Australia Springwood Queensland 4127 Australia

4. Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health Australia Macquarie Park New South Wales 2113 Australia

5. School of Veterinary Science The University of Queensland Gatton Queensland 4343 Australia

Abstract

We studied over 222,000 cases of emergency veterinary consultations in four regions along the eastern coast of Australia. We found that cases of tick paralysis (TP) caused by the eastern paralysis tick, Ixodes holocyclus, accounted for 7.5% of these cases: >16,000 cases. The season of TP and the number (prevalence) of TP cases varied among regions and over the years. Our study of the association between weather and (i) the start of the season of TP, and (ii) the number of TP cases revealed much about the intricate relationship between the weather and I. holocyclus. We studied the effect of the hypothetical availability of isoxazoline‐containing tick‐preventative medicines and found that an increase in the availability of these medicines had significantly contributed to the decrease in TP cases. We found that the weather in winter accounted for the time of the year the season of TP starts whereas the weather in summer accounted for the number of TP cases in the TP season. Last, through a study of the effects of shifts in the climate under four hypothetical scenarios (warmer/cooler and drier/wetter than average), we propose that the start of the season of TP depends on how soon the weather in winter becomes suitable for the activity (e.g. host‐seeking) and the development of I. holocyclus nymphs, and that the number of TP cases during the TP season depends on how many engorged female ticks and their eggs survive during summer.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary,General Medicine

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