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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2011 Dec 1.
Published in final edited form as: Ticks Tick Borne Dis. 2010 Dec 1;1(4):159–167. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2010.09.004

Table 1.

Number of O. coriaceus and D. occidentalis ticks collected in carbon dioxide-baited pitfall traps in 8 dense woodlands bordered by chaparral or grassland, Hopland area, California, 13 June to 7 August 2003.

Woodland sitea Number of
traps set
Number of ticks collected by
speciesb (stagec)
Percentage of traps
yielding ≥1 tick
Mean number of ticks/trap ±
SD

O-cor D-occ O-cor D-occ O-cor D-occ
Beasley 20 7 (n) 0 5.0 0.35±1.56
Hunt Club 20 0 1 (f) 5.0 0.05±0.22
James II 50 27 (23n, 2m, 2f) 9 (3m, 6f) 26.0 12.0 0.54±1.51 0.18±0.63
Maude 20 0 0
Cell Tower, Parson, Pepperwood, Tank 80 0 2 (m, f) 2.5 0.03±0.17
Total 190 34 (30n, 2m, 2f) 12 (4m, 8f) 7.4 4.7 0.18±0.95 0.06±0.35
a

Beasley, Hunt Club, James II and Maude were bordered by chaparral, the remaining four sites by grassland. Data for the grass-bordered sites were pooled because they yielded only two ticks.

b

O-cor, Ornithodoros coriaceus, D-occ, Dermacentor occidentalis.

c

n, nymph; m, male; f, female.