Litcius/Paper detail

Forests harbor more ticks than other habitats: A meta-analysis

Audrey Bourdin, Théo Dokhelar, Séverine Bord, Inge van Halder, Alex Stemmelen, Michael Scherer‐Lorenzen, Hervé Jactel

2023Forest Ecology and Management30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

With increasing deforestation, questions are being raised about the risk of zoonotic disease to humans. To better assess the role of forest in the emergence of tick-borne diseases, we conducted a meta-analysis of the scientific literature to compare the abundance or diversity of ticks between forest and open habitats (natural or anthropogenic) and a meta-regression to test how tick abundance is influenced by the abundance of their vertebrate hosts in forest habitats. We found that Ixodes ticks were on average more abundant and diverse in forests than in any other non-forested habitats, the difference being more pronounced with mixed deciduous- coniferous than with deciduous forests. At the forest scale, exophilic Ixodes tick abundance was positively influenced by the abundance of their ungulate hosts. Our results suggest that mixed forests represent the habitats with the highest level of tick hazard. However, more studies are needed to assess the risk of transmission of tick-borne diseases in forests, which also depends on the prevalence of pathogens and the exposure of people.

Topics & Concepts

Abundance (ecology)EcologyHabitatDeciduousTickBiologyTick-borne diseaseIxodesUngulateGeographyVector-borne infectious diseasesViral Infections and VectorsVector-Borne Animal Diseases