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» LymeNet Flash » Questions and Discussion » Medical Questions » Why are there so many ticks this winter in Mass.

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Author Topic: Why are there so many ticks this winter in Mass.
Mishelly00
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I can't believe how many people have been pulling ticks off their pets this winter. We found one on the floor in my house. My husband had to remove one from his co-workers neck the other day. Very deep in her neck. UGGGHHHHH!!!!!!!!!! Somebody else at his work pulled 5 off his dog 2 weeks ago.

So on and so on!!! Does this mean that this summer is going to be way worse than normal. For crying out loud someone needs to do something about the tick population. It's not even like I live out in the woods. Why are they out in the freezing weather??? Sorry just had to vent!!!

Posts: 79 | From Oxford,MA,01540 | Registered: Jul 2004  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
ticked in ri
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I was just talking to a co-worker about this the other day. She lives in a wooded area in RI. She found a tick crawling on her son last week and her husband found one I him a few weeks ago.

It seems that the ticks are inactive when it's really cold (below freezing) but with the warmer temps that we are having here in New England they are active on the surface of the ground. I heard the ticks can be active when its in the 40s and 50s.

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Foggy
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So comforting that there's a dearth of LLMDs in MA, too. [dizzy]
Posts: 2451 | From Lyme Central | Registered: Aug 2001  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
iceskater
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the over all climate on the east coast allows the temperature gradient that ticks need to survive. With a more temperate winter this year and somewhat wetter conditions in some areas- is more conducive to ticks. An NBC weatherman, in Philadelphia, wrote a wonderful book on climatology. I read it...( No tick refs in book,) however, Seems like the ticks like the geoography and weather on the east coast. The ticks due to warmer temps have been less dormant or less sluggish, so they are cashing in their frequent flier miles earlier this year... Lovely. More problems and more risk of exposures and bites.
Posts: 719 | From Delaware | Registered: Jan 2006  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
DJP
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This article talks about ticks in NE at this time of year.


South Coast Today
Standard-Times
Daily
February 15, 2006
Top Stories
LOCAL

*****
Biting back: As snow melts, ticks emerge
By JOSEPH R. LaPlante, Standard-Times staff writer


Call it a mixed New England blessing.

Unseasonably warm temperatures lower the thermostat and get
us outside -- where the ticks wait.

All the 40- and 50-degree days this winter have been prime
basking opportunities for deer ticks -- known by scientists
as Ixodidae Ixodes scapularis -- the loathsome, miniscule
carriers of Lyme disease and other illnesses.

The small, dark, nasty blood feeder is lurking today along
paths, trails and roads, looking for its next meal as
though it were July.

Beware, because animals and humans are getting bitten,
according to the state Department of Public Health and
local veterinarians.

"Be vigilant," said Dr. Christine Gaumont, whose Acushnet
Animal Hospital has logged several reports of pet owners
finding ticks on their pets.

"Check your animals and apply a good name-brand
preventative -- Advantix or Frontline -- available at your
vet," Dr. Gaumont advised.

Humans should be checking themselves closely after outdoor
strolls in areas where ticks thrive in warmer seasons, said
Dr. Bela Matyas, medical director of the epidemiology
program at the state Department of Public Health.

"Check your clothes and feel your skin for bumps that are
bigger," he said.

"We are receiving several scattered reports from around the
state of ticks biting people."

This is an unusually active winter season for ticks, said
professor Stephen Rich, a medical entomologist at UMass
Amherst.

"There is usually enough snow and cold to make them
inactive," he said.

But the warm temperatures and what professor Rich surmises
is that a recent acclimation to cold weather, manifested in
the migration of the once-coastal creature to Amherst and
beyond, is making the tick a year-round pest.

A tick dining this time of year is an adult, larger and
easier to detect than the nymphs that haunt us from May to
October.

These adult ticks either missed their blood meals last
October or November or, rather than wait for their normal
meal in April or May, are making like Florida retirees and
catching the early-bird specials, to liberally paraphrase
Professor Rich.

Deer ticks feed mostly on deer, cattle and other large
animals, but humans offer a bountiful repast.

Ticks might inflict a painful bite. Deer ticks also might
carry the Lyme disease bacteria in their systems. Lyme
disease causes flu-like systems in people, and often causes
arthritic symptoms. Long-term neurological problems also
loom when treatment is delayed. Lyme disease can be treated
successfully with antibiotics administered orally.

Lyme bacteria seeps into the bloodstream of the bitten
person or animal over 24 to 48 hours. Ticks should be
removed with tweezers as soon as they are discovered, and
medical attention should be sought.

Lyme disease was first reported in Connecticut in 1975 and
is named after the town of Lyme, where it was first
observed.

Last weekend's colder temperatures are not occasion to let
your guard down, Dr. Matyas said.

"If it is very cold or if there is snow cover, you are not
likely to encounter them," he said. "But the temperature in
micro-environments can be warm enough for them, kind of
like how if your car is parked in the sun on a cold day;
the car is warm inside despite the cold outside. They find
spots that warm in the sun despite the cold temperature."

Contact Joseph R. LaPlante at [email protected]
*****

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Lydie
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Is true that only adults are around and biting right now?
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lucy
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I think the nymphs are out because I've pulled the tiniest ticks off both the cat and 2 of the dogs recently.

I've gotten many of the larger ones too, but the tiny ones,when they embed, are a ***** to get off with the puller we use. Ugh!

Posts: 175 | From ma. | Registered: Aug 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
DJP
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We are west of Boston and I haven't seen any yet, but with some of those warm days I was hoping they were coming out and then dying when the temps dropped.

I'm paranoid because my two little ones just stopped treatment.

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valymemom
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Early January 2005 my son came down in the morning before showering with a tick.

I removed a tick from under my arm February 2005.

Both of us have lyme.

We live in northern VA.

Posts: 1240 | From Centreville,VA | Registered: Mar 2005  |  IP: Logged | Report this post to a Moderator
   

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