Frequent isolation of Francisella tularensis from Dermacentor reticulatus ticks in an enzootic focus of tularaemia

Med Vet Entomol. 1996 Jul;10(3):241-6. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2915.1996.tb00737.x.

Abstract

A total of 924 questing Dermacentor reticulatus (Fabricius), 504 Ixodes ricinus (L.), sixty Haemaphysalis concinna Koch and 718 mosquitoes (Aedes spp.) were examined in a floodplain forest ecosystem during the 1994-95 outbreak of tularaemia in South Moravia, Czech Republic. Francisella tularensis was not isolated from H.concinna ticks or Aedes spp. mosquitoes, whereas twenty-one isolates were recovered from the other haematophagous arthropods. Dermacentor reticulatus revealed a significantly higher infection rate (2.6%) than I.ricinus (0.2%). This tick species acts as principal vector for tularaemia in the enzootic focus. Monitoring of D.reticulatus for F.tularensis thus seems to be a very efficient approach in the surveillance of tularaemia in the flood-plain forest ecosystems of Europe.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aedes / microbiology
  • Animals
  • Arthropod Vectors / microbiology
  • Czech Republic
  • Dermacentor / microbiology*
  • Ecosystem
  • Francisella / isolation & purification*
  • Humans
  • Ixodes / microbiology
  • Rabbits / microbiology
  • Ticks / microbiology
  • Tularemia / epidemiology
  • Tularemia / microbiology*