Laboratory and Field Studies on the Biology of the Relapsing Fever Tick Vector (Ornithodoros Hermsi Wheeler) in the High Mountains of California
- 1 May 1951
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in The American Journal of Tropical Medicine
- Vol. s1-31 (3) , 373-380
- https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.1951.s1-31.373
Abstract
Summary A large colony of Ornithodoros hermsi Wheeler was successfully established in the laboratory from 2,747 ticks collected from rodent nests in snags in the coniferous forests above 6,000 feet in the High Sierra and San Bernardino Mountains of California. Laboratory white mice served as sources of blood meals for the ticks which were maintained in 50 ml. Erlenmeyer flasks. One O. hermsi was fed experimentally on one little brown bat. Ornithodoros hermsi was found in 39 snags; 18 (46 per cent) contained ticks that produced relapsing fever in mice. The highest rate of infective ticks in a snag was 19 per cent of the number tested. The transovarian transmission rate from infected females to their larvae was a minimum of 5.3 per cent. Ornithodoros hermsi was found in more or less close association with the following sylvan rodents and birds: chipmunks, deer mice, bush-tailed wood rats, desert wood rats, little brown bats and mountain bluebirds.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sylvatic plague studies. The vector efficiency of nine species of fleas compared with Xenopsylla cheopisEpidemiology and Infection, 1947
- Ornithodorus hermsi: Feeding and Molting Habits in Relation to the Acquisition and Transmission of Relapsing Fever SpirochetesPublic Health Reports®, 1940