Current Research Projects
Effects of Sustained Reduction of White-tailed Deer
on the Abundance of Ixodes scapularis (Acari:
Ixodidae) in an Endemic Lyme Disease Area of New Jersey
Background. Lyme disease has become the
most common vector-borne disease in the United States.
The importance of white-tailed deer (Odocoileus
virginianus) as hosts for the blacklegged tick
(Ixodes scapularis Say), the principal vector
of Lyme borreliosis in the eastern and mid-western United
States, is well documented, and the incidence of Lyme
disease appears to be directly related to deer density.
Because white-tailed deer have become overabundant in
many suburban areas, local governments have conducted
or are considering deer reduction programs with greater
frequency. Justifications for such programs have
included increasing concern for highway and road safety
(reduction of deer-vehicle collisions); observed ecological
effects due to over-browsing (replacement of native
plants by invasive exotic plants, shifts in mammal and
avian diversity); and reducing tick-borne disease risk.
Objective: We monitored the abundance
of black-legged ticks and the Lyme disease incidence
rate during a municipally sponsored deer reduction program
within a suburban residential area to determine if there
was a measurable decrease in the abundance of ticks
due to deer removal, and if the reduction in ticks resulted
in a reduction in the incidence rate within the human
population.
Study Design and Methods. The study was conducted in Bernards Township, located in northern Somerset County, New Jersey. In Fall 2001, the Township began a five-year program of incremental deer removal and annual aerial census of the local deer population. We established tick sampling plots throughout the Township and in surrounding areas with no deer removal program to monitor the numbers of host-seeking ticks. We also conducted active surveillance for Lyme disease in the Township. Bernards Township is among 18 municipalities in the DHSS Active Surveillance.
Study Results. After three seasons, the estimated deer population was reduced by 46.7 %, from the 2002 post-fawning estimate of 2,899 deer (45.6 deer/km2) to a 2005 estimate of 1,540 deer (24.3 deer/km2). There was no apparent effect of the deer culling program on numbers of questing nymphal ticks in the culling areas and the overall numbers of host-seeking ticks in the culling areas appeared to increase in the second year of the program. The Lyme disease incidence rate generated by both passive and active surveillance systems showed no clear trend among years and did not appear to vary with declining deer density.
Conclusions. Given the resources required to mount and maintain a community-based program of sufficient magnitude to effectively reduce vector tick density in ecologically open situations where there are few impediments to deer movement, it may be that deer reduction, while serving other community goals, is unlikely to be a primary means of tick control by itself. However, in concert with other tick control interventions, such programs may provide one aspect of a successful community effort to reduce the abundance of vector ticks.
These results will be published in the Journal of Medical Entomology later this year.