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Browsing by Author "Hemming-Schroeder Elizabeth"

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    A mark-release-recapture approach to characterize tick questing preferences and dispersal distance
    Gobran Sabrina; Brisnehan Jake; Wegryn Jon; Hemming-Schroeder Elizabeth
    Abstract Studying tick behavior is crucial for understanding how climate, disturbances, and land-use changes shape tick populations and tick-borne disease risk. Mark-release-recapture studies can provide valuable answers to questions regarding tick movement and behavior, population sizes, and survivorship. Standard tick mark-release-recapture provides limited resolution to understanding individual behaviors, limiting our ability to answer questions that require repeated observations of the same individuals. We developed a new, operationally simple method to track large populations of individual ticks over space and time. We found non-random movement patterns, including directed movement towards grass, vegetation-dependent dispersal distances and rate, and sex-based differences in movement. Practical implication: This method can be applied to other tick species to assess tick longevity, determine dispersal ranges and rate, and analyze questing behavior and success.

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