First report of Amblyomma latepunctatum and the second record of Ixodes luciae in the state of Acre, Brazil

Author:

Tojal Simone Delgado1ORCID,Meneguetti Dionatas Ulises de Oliveira2,Martins Thiago Fernandes3,Labruna Marcelo Bahia3,Aguirre André de Abreu Rangel4,Siebra Emilly Amanda Mesquita5,Cruz Karoline Silva da5,Camargo Luís Marcelo Aranha6

Affiliation:

1. Universidade Federal São João del-Rei, Brasil; Universidade Federal do Acre, Brasil

2. Universidade Federal do Acre, Brasil; Universidade Federal do Acre, Brasil

3. Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil

4. Fundação Oswaldo Cruz, Brasil

5. Universidade Federal do Acre, Brasil

6. Universidade Federal do Acre, Brasil; Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil; Instituto Nacional de Epidemiologia da Amazônia Ocidental, Brasil; Centro de Pesquisas em Medicina Tropical, Brasil; Centro Universitário São Lucas, Brasil

Abstract

Abstract The state of Acre is in the western part of the Brazilian Amazon region and few studies involving ticks are available. The aim of the present study was to provide the first report of occurrence of Amblyomma latepunctatum and the second record of Ixodes luciae in Acre. Ticks were collected in October 2020 inside an open forested area in the municipality of Rio Branco, the state capital of Acre. Ixodid ticks were identified according to their external morphological characteristics. Three specimens were found on the vegetation by means of a visual search and were identified as Amblyomma scalpturatum (one male and one female) and Amblyomma latepunctatum (one male). Another specimen was found parasitizing a Didelphis marsupialis female that was caught using a Tomahawk trap; this was identified as Ixodes luciae (one male). This first report of A. latepunctatum in the state of Acre increases the number of species recorded here to 22. In addition, presence of I. luciae is confirmed in this state (second record), in the western Brazilian Amazon region.

Publisher

FapUNIFESP (SciELO)

Subject

General Veterinary,Parasitology

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