Blacklegged
Ixodes scapularis Say
The blacklegged or deer tick is found throughout the
eastern portion of the United States and several upper
mid-western states. Despite its extensive geographical
distribution, most Lyme disease cases are found in coastal
northeastern and mid-Atlantic states. In New Jersey,
the blacklegged tick, and the diseases it transmits, are
most common in rural and suburban wooded areas throughout
the State.
In New Jersey, the life cycle of the blacklegged tick
requires about 2 years to complete. Adults are active
in the fall, during the winter when temperatures rise
above freezing, and in the spring. After mating and
feeding on a host, usually a large- to medium-sized
mammal, the engorged female drops off the host, finds
a secluded location, digests the bloodmeal, and eventually
produces an eggmass containing up to several thousand
individual eggs. These eggs hatch into uninfected larvae
during the summer. There is little transovarial passage
of spirochetes from infected females to eggs. The larvae
typically quest at ground level in the leaf litter.
This host-seeking behavior favors the location and feeding
upon small mammals and certain birds. After feeding for several days, larvae will
drop off the host, overwinter, and molt to nymphs the
following spring. If a larval tick fed on an infected
host, it will become infected and carry the pathogens
through the molt (transstadial transmission) to become
infected nymphs. Nymphs also quest at or near ground
level and tend to feed on the same small mammals and
birds as larvae. After feeding for 3-4 days, the nymphs
will leave the host, digest the blood, and molt to adults
in the fall of the same year. If the nymph was infected
by feeding on an infected host (reservoir) as a larva,
it now has the opportunity to transmit the spirochetes
to the next host upon which it feeds. Nymphs that were
not infected have another chance to obtain spirochetes
from the second feeding. Spirochetes are also transstadially
passed from the nymphal to the adult stage. Unlike the
immature stages, adults frequently quest on shrub layer
vegetation and, therefore, tend to encounter larger
animals as hosts. Again, the females will mate and feed
for 5-7 days, thus completing the life cycle.
Several important points bear emphasis. First, although
different generations are involved, the activity period
of nymphs precedes that of larvae during any given year.
As a result, nymphs have the opportunity to feed upon
and infect an array of small mammals that will serve
as hosts for larvae 6-8 weeks later. This phenomenon
is largely responsible for the inordinately high infection
prevalence of Lyme disease spirochetes in nymphal and
adult blacklegged ticks. Secondly, adults normally become
inactive as temperatures drop below freezing during
winter and resume activity as temperatures increase
in spring, giving the appearance of a bimodal activity
period. However, unlike lone star and American dog ticks,
adult blacklegged ticks will resume host-seeking activity
during winter when temperatures rise above freezing.
As a result, Lyme disease transmission risk may be substantial
even during winter months.
Since most cases of Lyme disease occur between May and
July, transmission appears to be epidemiologically linked
to the activity period of nymphal blacklegged ticks.
People tend to be more active in tick habitat during
this time and since nymphs are quite small, many feed
becoming fully engorged with blood without ever being
noticed. However, some Lyme disease cases have been
reported with a month of onset between October and April.
Therefore, transmission during the fall, winter, and
early spring can only result from exposure to infected
adults. Although adults have a much higher spirochete
infection prevalence than nymphs, fewer Lyme disease
cases occur during this period because adult ticks are
less abundant; fewer people are active in tick habitats;
those people who are active generally wear multiple
layers of clothing; people like hunters, hikers, bird
watchers, and others who engage in outdoor recreational
activities are generally more knowledgeable about tick
bite prevention; and adult ticks, because they are much
larger than nymphs, are more easily seen and removed
before they transmit disease pathogens.