Microhabitat selection by two reptile ticks at their parapatric boundary

Abstract
The parapatric boundary between the reptile ticks. Aponomma hydrosauri and Amblyomma limbatum, near Mt Mary, South Australia, coincides with a vegetational ecotone. Samples of litter from each side of the tick boundary showed considerable heterogeneity, but there were consistent differences in the composition and quantity of litter. North of the boundary, where Amb. limbatum is found, there is less litter and an absence of Eucalyptus leaves in the litter. Since the litter retards evaporative water loss, and Ap. hydrosauri is less tolerant of dehydration, reduced litter quantity may reduce the fitness of colonizing Ap. hydrosauri. In laboratory and field trials, larvae and nymphs of both tick species chose litter microhabitats in preference to bare soil, with the exception of fed Ap. hydrosauri larvae which, in trials with litter from north of the boundary, rarely moved from the bare soil. This behaviour may also reduce the fitness of colonizing Ap. hydrosauri.The two species adopted different positions in the litter. Ap. hydrosauri were predominantly found on the surface, at the interface between soil and litter as fed larvae, and on or under the surface as nymphs. Amb. limbatum larvae were more often buried under the surface, while nymphs were found mostly in the litter above the soil surface. Hypotheses to explain the maintenance of the parapatric boundary are discussed in the light of these results.