~ Office Supplies ~~ Buy Posters ~~ A-Z Products ~~ Website Advertising


Tick - Wikipedia

<<Up     Contents

Tick

Ticks
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Arachnida
Order: Acarina
Families
Ixodidae - Hard ticks
Argasidae - Soft ticks

Tick is the common name for the small wingless arachnids that, along with mites, comprise the order Acarina. Ticks are external parasites, living off the blood of mammals, birds, and occasionally reptiles and amphibians.

The major families of tick include the Ixodidae or hard ticks, which have thick outer shells made of chitin, and Argasidae or soft ticks, which have a membraneous outer surface. Soft ticks typically live in crevices and emerge briefly to feed, while hard ticks will embed themselves beneath the skin of a host for long periods of time.


Larger adult deer tick

Ticks can transmit human diseases such as relapsing fever[?], Lyme disease, Rocky Mountain spotted fever, tularemia[?], equine encephalitis[?] and several forms of ehrlichiosis. Additionally, they are responsible for transmitting livestock diseases, including babesiosis[?] and anaplasmosis[?]. Generally, tick-born diseases correspond to a specific tick-host combination, and are limited in their geographical extent.

Ticks are often found in tall grass, where they will rest themselves at the tip of a blade so as to attach themselves to a passing animal or human. They will generally drop off of the animal when full, but this may take several days. Ticks contain a structure in their mouth area that allows them to anchor themselves firmly in place while sucking blood. Pulling a tick out forcefully out from under the skin often leaves the head behind. See also Tick removal.

Dermacentor variabilis, the American dog tick, is perhaps the most well-known of the North American hard ticks. Ixodes dammini, the deer tick, is common to the eastern part of North America and is known for spreading Lyme disease. A close cousin of I. dammini, Ixodes pacificus lives in the western part of the continent and is responsible for spreading Lyme disease and the more deadly Rocky Mountain spotted fever. I. pacificus tends to prefer livestock as its adult host.

Life Cycle

Each species of tick requires three different hosts to complete its life cycle. Generally, the larval stage feeds on small reptiles, birds, or mammals, and the adult will parasitize larger mammals.

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump




 
 
15 gram blue Calcite gem stone chunk Cab cabbing cabochon gemstone lapidary cabachon rough 79 carats
 15 gram blue Calcite chunk Cab cabbing cabochon lapidary cabachon 79 carats 
 
WHITE Clear Quartz jewel Loose natural faceted cut polished jewelry gemstone 7x5 mm ov rutile single
 WHITE Clear Quartz jewel Loose ed cut polished jewelry 7x5 mm ov rutile single 
 
65 gr Arizona pink red yellow PETRIFIED WOOD Cab lapidary rough tumble polished cabbing gemstone lot
 65 gr Arizona pink red yellow PETRIFIED WOOD Cab lapidary tumble polished cabbing lot 
 
6 carat pink Rhodonite gem Polished rectangle block Cabbing cab cabochon rough gemstone single stone
 6 carat pink Rhodonite Polished rectangle block Cabbing cab cabochon single  
 
Orange SUNSTONE Feldspar gem stone polished gems 8x6 mm jewelry gemstone 8x6mm pair cabs NICE D
 Orange SUNSTONE Feldspar polished 8x6 mm jewelry 8x6mm pair cabs NICE D