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THIS WEEK at HILTON POND
15-21 January 2006
Installment #301---Visitor #
(Back to Preceding Week; on to Next Week)
LAST CALL: |
AN EPIDEMIC OF BIRD TICKS? Near sunset one day this week, we were making our rounds of Hilton Pond, blissfully enjoying the pinks and blues of the Carolina evening sky. As we strolled past a stand of Eastern Red Cedars we were startled by a sudden blow to our left shoulder--an impact not painful but firm enough to bring us to defensive status. We quickly scanned our surroundings for the source of the attack and found behind us a Cedar Waxwing hopping on the ground. Scooping it up gently, we immediately noticed a large, fully engorged tick behind its right eye. Both eyes were weepy, nearly closed, and apparently damaged, so we can only assume this bird was "flying blind" when it ran directly in a random passerby. There are folks who believe animals in distress seek out people who might help them, but without scientific evidence to support such conjecture, we conclude this was simply a bizarre, chance encounter. All text & photos © Hilton Pond Center We're not sure what the chances might be of having a bird fly into you while walking a trail--it was certainly a first for us--but we do know the odds of encountering a bird with a tick seem to be higher than normal this winter in the Carolina Piedmont, including Hilton Pond Center. We had already found a one-eyed tick-bearing waxwing dead on the road in front of our old farmhouse on Christmas Eve day--probably the result of the bird not being able to see well enough to avoid a fast-moving vehicle. And each of two Common Grackles captured last week for banding carried a tick on its crown. In the past month or so here have been numerous tick-related postings to various bird listservs, and we personally got a couple dozen E-mail responses to our request for evidence of a possible "tick epidemic" in the Southeast. We also received photos of ticks attached to birds, including a Dark-eyed Junco, an Eastern Towhee, and several House Finches. Some of these--like the Cedar Waxwing that ran into us on the trail--ended up dying, no doubt either directly or indirectly because of the tick(s). As far as well could tell from photos sent to us, all the bird ticks in question were Ixodes brunneus. This tick--the same species we were able to photograph head-on at high magnification (above) after it dropped off our Cedar Waxwing that died overnight--affects only birds and is found primarily in the eastern U.S. An undistended female tick--such as the American Dog Tick, Dermacentor variabilis (above right)--shows its major body parts are its legs and head, a distendable abdomen, and the scutum--a hard, flat plate just behind the head. (Males lack the scutum and take only very small blood meals.) Just to provide a sense of scale, in the head-on photo above of the nearly spherical Bird Tick, the scutum is about twice the length of the actual now-3/8th-inch-long tick. Obviously this illustration depicts what must be one fat, happy, blood-filled parasite! The ventral view (above) of our engorged female Bird Tick from the waxwing reveals something telling: The tick has eight legs, which makes it--like spiders--an arachnid and an arthropod. Spiders are placed in a separate order (Araneae), while ticks are in the Acari, which includes mites; in fact, as arachnologists are quick to point out, ticks ARE mites. Ticks, by the way, are further divided into two families: Hard Ticks--the Ixodidae--which includes the better-known ectoparasites of birds, mammals, and reptiles; and the Soft Ticks (Argasidae), which lack a scutum, vary in size, and are often overlooked. (Some taxonomists add a third tick family that includes only one obscure African species.). With all this tick anatomy and taxonomy info out of the way, we now return to the question of whether the southeastern U.S. is truly experiencing an epidemic of Bird Ticks this winter. To get a handle on this, we corresponded with Auburn University's Gary Mullen, who has studied the effects of ticks on birds for the past 20 years. Of special interest to Dr. Mullen and his colleagues Renee Anderson and Paul Nolan is a phenomenon known as "tick paralysis," in which some unknown substance in the saliva of a female tick can have debilitating effect on a host bird. Mullen and his co-workers write the condition is:
Amazingly, some individual birds and perhaps some bird species show none of the above symptoms, even when bearing more than one visibly engorged tick. If the unidentified agent in the tick's saliva is a neurotoxin, it may be that a seemingly unaffected bird survived a previous mild bite and developed an immunity, or it may be that some individuals and/or species are just naturally immune. Bird Ticks appear on a wide variety of birds, including female House Finches (above). Adult ticks seem to be more common in winter, but aside from this science knows almost nothing else about the Bird Tick's life cycle--especially where and when egg, larval, and nymphal stages occur. This brings up lots of interrelated questions. If a blood meal is necessary for egg development, do female ticks mate before or after becoming engorged? Where does mating occur? Are eggs laid on a potential host, or does the female deposit them in the soil? How do larval/nymphal/adult ticks get onto a bird? Is there an alternate host for immature ticks? What, if anything, do male ticks eat? If you used a beater net on grass and shrubs in fall or winter, would you come up with any Bird Ticks? How far can a migratory bird carry a tick? We suspect all these questions (and more) have been asked by Dr. Mullen and might eventually be answered by bird banders who carefully examine their captures for various stages of ticks in all seasons--not just in winter when the ectoparasites are so obvious. To this end, for several years we've been looking hard at heads and necks of bird we band, primarily because those particular anatomical areas are hardest for a bird to preen. We blow gently on the head feathers, using a magnifying visor to search for anything that looks like it might be a Bird Tick larva or nymph. One thing Dr. Mullen HAS learned about Bird Ticks is interesting and quite pertinent to the question at hand. Beginning in the winter of 1987-88--when he noticed a large number of birds with tick paralysis in Alabama--there has been a paralysis outbreak every three years (with the exception of 2002-2003). And guess what? The current winter of 2005-2006 is right on sequence for the three-year cycle, so apparently we ARE in the middle of a tick epidemic at Hilton Pond Center and elsewhere. It logically follows that if we were ever going to be flown into by a tick-bearing and semi-paralyzed Cedar Waxwing, this WAS the winter. All text & photos © Hilton Pond Center POSTSCRIPT #1: From Dr. Mullen's description of the progressive nature of tick paralysis excerpted above, it seems appropriate that if you manage to capture a living bird with tick attached you may be justified in trying to remove the parasite. This--as you know if you've ever tried to pull a tick from your own skin--isn't as easy as it sounds. We recommend simply using very fine forceps and clamping down on the tick as close to the bird as you can get--don't squeeze the abdomen or the tick may burst!--and simply tug hard until the tick pulls away. Usually a small amount of tissue will come off with the tick. (We have not tried any of the commercial tick-removing tools or chemicals.) POSTSCRIPT #2: Thanks to all the correspondents who sent us E-mails about and photos of ticks on birds. We're always interested in receiving more reports at RESEARCH. POSTSCRIPT #3: For other tick-related articles and photos on the Hilton Pond Center Web site, please see: 1) Bird Ticks , 2) The Piedmont Naturalist (21 Feb 1988) , and 3) Lyme Disease: Birds Ticks, and People.
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SPECIES BANDED THIS WEEK: * = New species for 2006 WEEKLY BANDING TOTAL YEARLY BANDING TOTAL (2006) BANDING GRAND TOTAL
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OTHER SIGHTINGS OF INTEREST --The first American Goldfinch of 2006 showed up this week. Not to be outdone by last week's leucistic Common Grackle, the goldfinch was a partial albino (above and below). The bird had a distinct white spot on its nape, and there was no hint of buffy or yellow hues anywhere else on its body, those colors also being replaced with white. We're beginning to think there's something in the water at Hilton Pond Center!
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