Monitoring questing winter tick abundance on traditional moose hunting lands

Author:

Berube Juliana A.1,Sirén Alexej P. K.1ORCID,Simpson Benjamin D.2,Klingler Kelly B.1,Wilson Tammy L.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Conservation University of Massachusetts Amherst 160 Holdsworth Way Amherst 01003 MA USA

2. Department of Natural Resources Penobscot Nation 12 Wabanaki Way Indian Island 04468 ME USA

3. U.S. Geological Survey, Massachusetts Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit University of Massachusetts Amherst 160 Holdsworth Way Amherst 01003 MA USA

Abstract

AbstractAn important symbolic and subsistence animal for many Native American Tribes, the moose (Alces alces; mos in Algonquin, Penobscot language) has been under consistent threat in the northeastern United States because of winter tick (Dermacentor albipictus) parasitism over the past several decades, causing declines in moose populations throughout the region. This decline has raised concern for Tribes and agencies that are invested in moose. Given this concern, it is increasingly important to effectively monitor and develop strategies to manage winter ticks to address consistent population declines of moose due to winter ticks. The Penobscot Nation developed a novel strategy to sample questing winter ticks (i.e., ticks that are actively seeking hosts) using a plot‐based sampling protocol that may be suitable for heterogeneous habitats. We deployed this protocol in the northeastern United States in 2022 during the tick questing period (Sep–Dec) on Penobscot Nation sovereign trust lands, the White Mountain National Forest and Umbagog National Wildlife Refuge, and western‐central Massachusetts, USA. We analyzed the data using occupancy and N‐mixture models. Detection probability peaked during mid‐October and tick occupancy and abundance were greatest at sites with intermediate understory vegetation height. The sampling protocol was successful at sampling ticks in Massachusetts, where abundances were expected to be low, indicating that it may be useful for studies planning to monitor winter tick distribution and abundance in areas with sub‐optimal moose habitat and where winter tick abundance is expected to be low. This approach may also benefit managers or researchers intending to monitor many species of hard ticks, and where imperfect detection is expected.

Publisher

Wiley

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