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tick |
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tickAny of the arachnid family Ixodoidae, order Acarina, of large bloodsucking mites. They have flat bodies protected by horny shields. Many carry and transmit diseases to mammals (including humans) and birds. Life cycleDuring part of their existence they parasitize animals and birds, for which they have developed a rostrum or beak composed of two barbed harpoons above and a dart below. Their eggs are laid on rough herbage and hatch into white six-legged larvae, which climb up the legs of passing animals and in some species complete their life history on the animal's skin, but in others return to the grass for a period, dropping from the host when engorged with blood.Ticks cause irritation and anaemia, and can also transmit typhus, Lyme disease, rickettsia, and relapsing fever. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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found from ixodid ticks in Japan: rapid species identification by 16S rRNA gene-targeted PCR analysis. Arbovirus isolations from ixodid ticks infesting livestock, Kano Plain, Kenya. Ixodid ticks have been found in association with seafaring birds and songbirds, which raises the possibility of migration-associated transmission. |
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