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Ticking Time Bomb? Gulf Coast Ticks Spotted In CT

HorizontalHunter

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The Gulf Coast tick has successfully established a population in Connecticut, and unfortunately it's not your average garden variety bug...
By Rich Kirby, Patch Staff
Sep 6, 2020 7:50 am ET | Updated Sep 7, 2020 7:26 am ET
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Ticking Time Bomb? Gulf Coast Ticks Spotted In CT
The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station is reporting that the Gulf Coast tick successfully established a population over the winter in Fairfield County. (Katherine Dugas (CAES))
CONNECTICUT — In addition to all the out-of-state humans moving into the state due to coronavirus concerns, we now have a new species of tick population to worry about as well.

The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station is reporting that the Gulf Coast tick successfully established a population over the winter in Fairfield County. That's a first for this species in Connecticut, and it's also its debut in all the Northeast, according to Dr. Goudarz Molaei, a research scientist who also directs the CAES Tick Surveillance and Testing Program.

The tick is common in Central and South American countries bordering the Gulf of Mexico, and can also be found in 14 US states, mostly along the Gulf Coast. "But recently this tick has been on the move and expanding its range, and the recent range expansion has been reported in Maryland and Delaware," Molaei said.

This is the fourth "important" tick species to set up shop in Connecticut, according to Molaei. It follows on the tiny heels of the black-legged, lone star, and dog ticks.

The new-to-our-area bug is not just a nuisance, it can transmit spotted fever. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, spotted fevers can range from mild to life-threatening. Most people who get sick with a spotted fever (other than the Rocky Mountain variety) will develop a dark scab at the site of tick or mite bite, fever, headache and rash. The disease is usually treated with doxycycline.

Previously, Connecticut researchers have found isolated one-sies and two-sies of the bug which were likely brought north by birds, but this is the first time we have an established population. In 2017-18, the lone star tick expanded its hunting grounds into Fairfield County, and moved into New Haven County two years later.

Why now? Molaei told Patch that "climate change in conjunction with other factors including some ecological changes" created the conditions for these species of tick to move here and set up shop.


The Bug's Here. Now What?

"Unfortunately, our resources are limited," Molaei said. "Once a species of tick or mosquito comes and establishes a population, it's very difficult to control. And sadly we have to try and deal with the presence of that species and try to limit its public health impact."

Insidiously, your new 8-legged neighbors have expanded their horizons. We've always been mindful of ticks when traveling in wooded areas in Connecticut, but now we should be equally alert near the shore, according to Molaei . He says he has been collecting Gulf Coast tick specimens in coastal areas where there is very little vegetation.

"We have to protect ourselves, cover ourselves, use repellents and pesticides, and after outdoor activity, when we return we have to do a diligent tick-check," the entomologist advised.

"Diligent" may be too soft a word. Molaei said that the new tick in its juvenile stage is just as problematic as the adult, only it is "smaller than a pinhead."

Although we humans can protect ourselves in all the usual ways against the Gulf Coast tick, none of that will help our dogs. Your best friend can contract the debilitating American canine hepatozoonosis by eating Gulf Coast ticks. Once infected, dogs can carry and pass on the infection for the rest of their lives.

Ticking Time Bomb? Gulf Coast Ticks Spotted In CT
 
Great 😕 ticks are the worst
And I have found 2 on my kids this year that were so tiny that would have never spotted if wasn’t giving them a bath.
My buddies wife in VA got bite by the lone star tick went thur hell trying to figure out what was making her sick and now she can’t eat any red meat.
I really hate ticks
 
Biodiversity is our strength. We need the churches and synagogues to be well funded with tax dollars to help settle these new American ticks in our country.
 
What would be the worst that could happen if we were to completely eradicate mosquitoes and ticks? Some species of birds and bats starve, or have to adapt to eating something else?
 
Still seems like Lyme is the biggest issue in the region. Scab and headache and take some Doxy??? Uhhh, OK.

What is it about Connecticut in the first place??? Why do things originate and land there???? So strange.

Final note: Shockingly, the states around the Gulf Coast aren't riddled with deaths or hospitalizations from this. Is this really a "big" deal?????
 
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