Off-host survival of Dermacentor variabilis (Acari: Ixodidae) adults near their northern distributional limit in Saskatchewan, Canada

Author:

Yunik Matthew E M1,Diyes Chulantha P1,Chilton Neil B1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Saskatchewan , Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Dermacentor variabilis (Say) is expanding its range northwards in Saskatchewan and Manitoba (Canada). Knowledge of the relative ability of different life cycle stages to survive off-host over winter is important for assessing the potential for further range expansion and risk of pathogen transmission. In the present study, the off-host survival of D. variabilis adults was determined in outdoor terraria within a field plot close to Lizard Lake Community Pasture (LLCP) situated near the northern distributional limit in Saskatchewan. Only a small proportion (7%) of adult ticks in this relatively recently established population survived from mid-summer to late winter. Off-host survival had declined further to <4% by mid-spring. A significantly greater proportion of female ticks (6%) survived from mid-summer to mid-spring than did male ticks (1%). The supercooling points (SCPs), the temperature below 0 °C when body fluids spontaneously freeze, of the 17 ticks that survived through to mid-spring did not differ significantly from the SCPs of questing ticks in the previous summer, suggesting adult D. variabilis do not undergo cold hardening during winter diapause. The off-host survival of D. variabilis adults near LLCP was also much lower than that previously reported for adults from Sandy Hook in Manitoba, a population that has been established for decades. This finding suggests that there is geographical variation in the ability of D. variabilis in southern Canada to survive from mid-summer to the subsequent spring. However, the ecological and genetic factors influencing the survival of northern populations of D. variabilis requires further investigation.

Funder

The National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada

NSERC Discovery Grant

Alexander Graham Bell Canada Doctoral Graduate Scholarship

University of Saskatchewan

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Insect Science,General Veterinary,Parasitology

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