Abstract
The blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis Say, is the primary vector to humans in the eastern United States of the Lyme disease spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, as well as causative agents of anaplasmosis and babesiosis. Its close relative in the far western United States, the western blacklegged tick Ixodes pacificus Cooley and Kohls, is the primary vector to humans in that region of the Lyme disease and anaplasmosis agents. Since 1991, when standardized surveillance and reporting began, Lyme disease case counts have increased steadily in number and in geographical distribution in the eastern United States. Similar trends have been observed for anaplasmosis and babesiosis. To better understand the changing landscape of risk of human exposure to disease agents transmitted by I. scapularis and I. pacificus, and to document changes in their recorded distribution over the past two decades, we updated the distribution of these species from a map published in 1998. The presence of I. scapularis has now been documented from 1,420 (45.7%) of the 3,110 continental United States counties, as compared with 111 (3.6%) counties for I. pacificus. Combined, these vectors of B. burgdorferi and other disease agents now have been identified in a total of 1,531 (49.2%) counties spread across 43 states. This marks a 44.7% increase in the number of counties that have recorded the presence of these ticks since the previous map was presented in 1998, when 1,058 counties in 41 states reported the ticks to be present. Notably, the number of counties in which I. scapularis is considered established (six or more individuals or one or more life stages identified in a single year) has more than doubled since the previous national distribution map was published nearly two decades ago. The majority of county status changes occurred in the North-Central and Northeastern states, whereas the distribution in the South remained fairly stable. Two previously distinct foci for I. scapularis in the Northeast and North-Central states appear to be merging in the Ohio River Valley to form a single contiguous focus. Here we document a shifting landscape of risk for human exposure to medically important ticks and point to areas of re-emergence where enhanced vector surveillance and control may be warranted.
Keywords: Ixodes scapularis, Ixodes pacificus, distribution, Lyme disease
The blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis Say, is the primary vector to humans in the eastern United States of the Lyme disease spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, as well as the relapsing fever spirochete, Borrelia miyamotoi; causative agents of anaplasmosis (Anaplasma phagocytophilum) and babesiosis (Babesia microti); and Powassan encephalitis virus (Piesman and Eisen 2008, Ebel 2010, Krause et al. 2015). Its close relative in the far western United States, the western blacklegged tick Ixodes pacificus Cooley and Kohls, is the primary vector to humans in that region of Lyme disease and anaplasmosis agents, as well as relapsing fever spirochetes (B. miyamotoi; Lane et al. 1994, Teglas and Foley 2006, Krause et al. 2015). Lyme disease is the most commonly reported vector-borne disease in the United States. It is a geographically focal illness, with the majority of cases reported from the Northeastern and North-Central states and discrete areas of risk in the Pacific Coast states (Mead 2015). Since 1991, when standardized surveillance and reporting began, Lyme disease case counts have increased steadily from roughly 10,000 cases in 1991 to more than 30,000 cases in 2008 and subsequent years (Bacon et al. 2008, Mead 2015); the true burden of disease is estimated to be roughly 10-fold greater (Hinckley et al. 2014, Nelson et al. 2015). In addition to the increase in case counts over time, the geographical foci of high-incidence counties have expanded both in the North-Central and in the Northeastern United States (Kugeler et al. 2015).
Rising case counts and geographical expansion of Lyme disease endemic areas have been attributed to range expansion of I. scapularis in the eastern United States (Bacon et al. 2008, Rydzewski et al. 2012, Lee et al. 2013, Brinkerhoff et al. 2014, Robinson et al. 2014, Wang et al. 2014, Khatchikian et al. 2015, Kugeler et al. 2015, Stone et al. 2015). However, because of a lack of systematic surveillance of I. scapularis and I. pacificus, national trends in the geographic distribution of these medically important ticks are difficult to document. To better understand the changing landscape of risk of human exposure to I. scapularis and I. pacificus in the United States, and to document changes in their distribution over the past two decades, we updated the reported distribution of these species from the map previously published by Dennis et al. (1998).
Materials and Methods
County Status Definitions
The definitions used to classify I. scapularis or I. pacificus as “established” or “reported” in a county follow Dennis et al. (1998). Counties were classified as established if at least six individual ticks or at least two of the three host-seeking life stages had been identified in a single collection period. Here, a single collection period is defined as a single year. Counties were classified as reported if they failed to meet the criteria for established but if at least one tick of any life stage had been identified at any time in that county, or if county records did not specify the number of ticks or life stages collected. Lack of tick records from a county—“no records”—does not imply that ticks are absent from that county, only that records of ticks having been collected in the county are lacking.
The county status (i.e., established, reported, or no records) given by Dennis et al. (1998) was used as the basis for our updated county status. If a county was classified as established by Dennis et al. (1998), it remained established in the updated classification regardless of whether more recent tick records were available. A county classified as reported by Dennis et al. (1998) retained this status in the updated classification, unless more recent collection records changed the county’s classification from reported to established. Herein, the term county refers to counties and county equivalents corresponding with five-digit Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) coding.
Data Sources
Six independent literature searches were conducted using Scopus and PubMed databases with the following key words “Ixodes scapularis,” “Ixodes pacificus,” and “tick” to identify relevant articles and abstracts published from 1996 through 25 August 2015. We also conducted a search to ensure that papers using the junior synonym “Ixodes dammini” rather than Ixodes scapularis were included. All reports that explicitly presented county-specific tick data were included in our database. In addition, we visited individual state health department Web sites to identify county-level tick surveillance data, and contacted public health officials, acarologists, and Lyme disease investigators throughout the United States to assess county-level tick collection data.
GIS Mapping
Our final database containing state, county, county FIPS code, county status as per Dennis et al. (1998), and the updated county status was joined based on FIPS codes to a continental United States county map using ArcMap 10.3 (ESRI, Redlands, CA).
Results
Counties With Recorded Presence of I. scapularis or I. pacificus
Our updated county status records show that I. scapularis now has been collected from 37 states, from the eastern seaboard to the eastern edge of the Great Plains, and I. pacificus from six western states (Tables 1–3; Fig. 1). No single state has records of both tick species, and five states in the Rocky Mountain region lack records for either I. scapularis or I. pacificus: Colorado, Idaho, Montana, New Mexico, and Wyoming. The presence of I. scapularis has now been documented from 1,420 (45.7%) of the 3,110 continental United States counties, as compared with 111 (3.6%) counties for I. pacificus. Combined, these primary vectors of B. burgdorferi and other tick-borne disease agents now have been identified in a total of 1,531 (49.2%) counties spread across 43 states. This marks a 44.7% increase in the number of counties that have recorded the presence of these ticks since the survey conducted by Dennis et al. (1998), when 1,058 counties in 41 states reported the ticks to be present. Nebraska and North Dakota are the two states where I. scapularis was recorded only after the Dennis et al. (1998) survey.
Table 1.
Species/State | No. (%) counties with reported status |
No. (%) counties with established status |
||
---|---|---|---|---|
By 1996 | By 2015 | By 1996 | By 2015 | |
I. scapularis | 556 (17.8) | 578 (18.6) | 396 (12.7) | 842 (27.1) |
Alabama | 20 (29.9) | 21 (31.3) | 25 (37.3) | 25 (37.3) |
Arkansas | 37 (49.3) | 25 (33.3) | 9 (12.0) | 27 (36.0) |
Connecticut | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 8 (100) | 8 (100) |
Delaware | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 3 (100) | 3 (100) |
Florida | 22 (32.8) | 15 (22.4) | 35 (52.2) | 52 (77.6) |
Georgia | 31 (19.5) | 35 (22.0) | 23 (14.5) | 35 (22.0) |
Illinois | 47 (46.1) | 29 (28.4) | 4 (3.9) | 35 (34.3) |
Indiana | 25 (27.2) | 37 (40.2) | 8 (8.7) | 29 (31.5) |
Iowa | 17 (17.2) | 25 (25.3) | 7 (7.1) | 14 (14.1) |
Kansas | 14 (13.3) | 14 (13.3) | 1 (1.0) | 1 (1.0) |
Kentucky | 2 (1.7) | 4 (3.3) | 0 (0) | 14 (11.7) |
Louisiana | 12 (18.8) | 23 (36.0) | 12 (18.8) | 12 (18.8) |
Maine | 3 (18.8) | 0 (0) | 13 (81.3) | 16 (100) |
Maryland | 2 (8.3) | 2 (8.7) | 21 (87.5) | 21 (91.3) |
Massachusetts | 3 (21.4) | 0 (0) | 9 (64.3) | 14 (100) |
Michigan | 22 (26.5) | 16 (19.3) | 5 (6.0) | 24 (28.9) |
Minnesota | 12 (13.8) | 3 (3.5) | 9 (10.3) | 45 (51.7) |
Mississippi | 72 (87.8) | 71 (86.6) | 10 (12.2) | 11 (13.4) |
Missouri | 8 (7.0) | 8 (7.0) | 21 (18.3) | 23 (20.0) |
Nebraska | 0 (0) | 3 (3.2) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
New Hampshire | 5 (50.0) | 1 (10.0) | 5 (50.0) | 9 (90.0) |
New Jersey | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 21 (100) | 21 (100) |
New York | 20 (32.3) | 1 (1.6) | 31 (50.0) | 61 (98.4) |
North Carolina | 23 (23.0) | 16 (16.0) | 7 (7) | 43 (43.0) |
North Dakota | 0 (0) | 3 (5.7) | 0 (0) | 5 (9.4) |
Ohio | 5 (5.7) | 31 (35.6) | 0 (0) | 33 (37.5) |
Oklahoma | 36 (46.8) | 36 (46.8) | 3 (4.0) | 3 (4.0) |
Pennsylvania | 26 (38.8) | 0 (0) | 23 (34.3) | 67 (100) |
Rhode Island | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 5 (100) | 5 (100) |
South Carolina | 14 (30.4) | 19 (41.3) | 13 (28.3) | 14 (30.4) |
South Dakota | 2 (3.0) | 2 (3.0) | 2 (3.0) | 0 (0) |
Tennessee | 6 (6.3) | 27 (28.4) | 1 (1.1) | 16 (16.8) |
Texas | 39 (15.4) | 45 (17.7) | 24 (9.5) | 26 (10.2) |
Vermont | 6 (43.0) | 2 (14.3) | 1 (7.1) | 11 (78.6) |
Virginia | 4 (3.0) | 29 (21.6) | 8 (6.0) | 43 (32.1) |
West Virginia | 2 (3.6) | 20 (36.4) | 2 (3.6) | 23 (41.8) |
Wisconsin | 16 (22.2) | 15 (20.8) | 29 (40.3) | 51 (70.8) |
I. pacificus | 16 (0.5) | 16 (0.5) | 90 (2.9) | 95 (3.1) |
Arizona | 1 (6.7) | 1 (6.7) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
California | 1 (1.72) | 1 (1.72) | 55 (94.8) | 55 (94.8) |
Nevada | 2 (11.8) | 2 (11.8) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
Oregon | 4 (11.1) | 4 (11.1) | 18 (50.0) | 18 (50.0) |
Utah | 4 (13.8) | 3 (10.3) | 4 (13.8) | 4 (13.8) |
Washington | 5 (12.8) | 6 (15.3) | 12 (30.8) | 16 (41.3) |
Table 3.
State and county | Status by Aug. 2015a | Status change from Dennis et al. (1998)b |
Source for change of status from Dennis et al. (1998) survey |
---|---|---|---|
Arizona | |||
Mohave | Established | ||
California | |||
Alameda | Established | ||
Amador | Established | ||
Butte | Established | ||
Calaveras | Established | ||
Colusa | Established | ||
Contra Costa | Established | ||
Del Norte | Established | ||
El Dorado | Established | ||
Fresno | Established | ||
Glenn | Established | ||
Humboldt | Established | ||
Imperial | Established | ||
Inyo | Established | ||
Kern | Established | ||
Kings | Established | ||
Lake | Established | ||
Lassen | Established | ||
Los Angeles | Established | ||
Madera | Established | ||
Marin | Established | ||
Mariposa | Established | ||
Mendocino | Established | ||
Merced | Established | ||
Mono | Reported | ||
Monterey | Established | ||
Napa | Established | ||
Nevada | Established | ||
Orange | Established | ||
Placer | Established | ||
Plumas | Established | ||
Riverside | Established | ||
Sacramento | Established | ||
San Benito | Established | ||
San Bernardino | Established | ||
San Diego | Established | ||
San Francisco | Established | ||
San Joaquin | Established | ||
San Luis Obispo | Established | ||
San Mateo | Established | ||
Santa Barbara | Established | ||
Santa Clara | Established | ||
Santa Cruz | Established | ||
Shasta | Established | ||
Sierra | Established | ||
Siskiyou | Established | ||
Solano | Established | ||
Sonoma | Established | ||
Stanislaus | Established | ||
Sutter | Established | ||
Tehama | Established | ||
Trinity | Established | ||
Tulare | Established | ||
Tuolumne | Established | ||
Ventura | Established | ||
Yolo | Established | ||
Yuba | Established | ||
Nevada | |||
Clark | Reported | ||
Lincoln | Reported | ||
Oregon | |||
Benton | Established | ||
Clackamas | Established | ||
Clatsop | Established | ||
Columbia | Reported | ||
Coos | Established | ||
Curry | Established | ||
Douglas | Established | ||
Hood River | Established | ||
Jackson | Established | ||
Jefferson | Reported | ||
Josephine | Established | ||
Lane | Established | ||
Lincoln | Established | ||
Linn | Established | ||
Marion | Established | ||
Multnomah | Established | ||
Polk | Reported | ||
Sherman | Established | ||
Tillamook | Established | ||
Umatilla | Reported | ||
Wasco | Established | ||
Washington | Established | ||
Utah | |||
Beaver | Reported | ||
Juab | Established | ||
Millard | Reported | ||
Piute | Reported | ||
Salt Lake | Established | ||
Tooele | Established | R-E | (Davis et al. 2015) |
Utah | Established | ||
Washington | Established | ||
Washington | |||
Chelan | Established | ||
Clallam | Established | N-E | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Clark | Established | ||
Cowlitz | Established | R-E | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Island | Reported | ||
Jefferson | Established | ||
King | Established | R-E | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Kitsap | Established | R-E | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Kittitas | Reported | N-R | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Klickitat | Established | ||
Lewis | Established | ||
Mason | Established | ||
Okanogan | Reported | N-R | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Pacific | Reported | N-R | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Pierce | Established | ||
San Juan | Established | ||
Skagit | Established | ||
Skamania | Established | ||
Snohomish | Reported | ||
Thurston | Established | ||
Whatcom | Established | ||
Yakima | Reported | N-R | E. Dykstra, unpublished |
Fields left blank indicate status was inherited from Dennis et al. (1998)
Established: Six or more ticks or two or more tick life stages; Reported: Fewer than six ticks and one tick life stage only.
N-R, change from No Records to Reported; N-E, change from No Records to Established; R-E, change from Reported to Established.
Counties Where I. scapularis Is Classified as Established or Reported
Ixodes scapularis now is classified as established in 842 counties (27.1% of counties in the continental United States) distributed across 35 states (Tables 1–3; Fig. 1). This more than doubles the number of counties in which the tick is classified as established since the previous survey by Dennis et al. (1998), when it was considered established in 396 counties (12.7% of counties in the continental United States) spanning 32 states (Tables 1–2; Fig. 1–2). In total, 446 counties were updated from either no records (n = 262) or reported (n = 184) to established, and 208 counties were updated from no records to reported (Table 2; Fig. 2). Counties with I. scapularis classified as established were added for three states: Kentucky, North Dakota, and Ohio.
Table 2.
State and county | Status by August 2015a | Status change from Dennis et al. (1998)b |
Source for change of status from Dennis et al. (1998) survey |
---|---|---|---|
Alabama | |||
Autauga | Established | ||
Baldwin | Reported | ||
Barbour | Established | ||
Bibb | Established | ||
Bullock | Established | ||
Butler | Established | ||
Chambers | Established | ||
Chilton | Reported | ||
Choctaw | Established | ||
Clarke | Established | ||
Clay | Reported | ||
Cleburne | Reported | ||
Coffee | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Colbert | Established | ||
Conecuh | Established | ||
Coosa | Established | ||
Covington | Established | ||
Crenshaw | Reported | ||
Dale | Reported | ||
Elmore | Established | ||
Escambia | Established | ||
Franklin | Established | ||
Geneva | Reported | ||
Hale | Established | ||
Henry | Established | ||
Houston | Reported | ||
Jackson | Established | ||
Jefferson | Reported | ||
Lawrence | Reported | ||
Lee | Established | ||
Lowndes | Reported | ||
Madison | Reported | ||
Marengo | Reported | ||
Mobile | Established | ||
Monroe | Established | ||
Montgomery | Reported | ||
Pickens | Established | ||
Randolph | Reported | ||
Russell | Established | ||
Sumter | Reported | ||
Talladega | Reported | ||
Tallapoosa | Established | ||
Tuscaloosa | Reported | ||
Washington | Reported | ||
Wilcox | Reported | ||
Winston | Established | ||
Arkansas | |||
Ashley | Established | ||
Baxter | Established | ||
Benton | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Boone | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Calhoun | Reported | ||
Carroll | Reported | ||
Clark | Established | N-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Cleburne | Established | N-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Columbia | Reported | ||
Conway | Reported | ||
Crawford | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Dallas | Reported | ||
Drew | Reported | ||
Faulkner | Established | N-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Franklin | Established | ||
Fulton | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Garland | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Grant | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Hempstead | Established | N-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Howard | Reported | ||
Izard | Reported | ||
Jefferson | Reported | ||
Johnson | Reported | ||
Lafayette | Reported | ||
Lawrence | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Lincoln | Reported | ||
Logan | Reported | ||
Madison | Established | ||
Marion | Established | R-E | (McAllister et al. 2013) |
Montgomery | Reported | ||
Nevada | Reported | ||
Newton | Reported | ||
Ouachita | Reported | ||
Perry | Reported | ||
Pike | Reported | ||
Poinsett | Established | N-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Polk | Established | ||
Pope | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Prairie | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Pulaski | Reported | ||
Randolph | Reported | ||
Saline | Established | N-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Scott | Reported | ||
Searcy | Established | ||
Sebastian | Established | ||
Sevier | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010) |
Sharp | Reported | ||
Stone | Established | ||
Union | Established | R-E | (Trout and Steelman 2010, McAllister et al. 2013) |
Van Buren | Reported | ||
Washington | Established | ||
Yell | Reported | ||
Connecticut | |||
Fairfield | Established | ||
Hartford | Established | ||
Litchfield | Established | ||
Middlesex | Established | ||
New Haven | Established | ||
New London | Established | ||
Tolland | Established | ||
Windham | Established | ||
Delaware | |||
Kent | Established | ||
New Castle | Established | ||
Sussex | Established | ||
District of Columbia | Established | N-E | T. L. Johnson, unpublished |
Florida | |||
Alachua | Established | ||
Baker | Established | ||
Bay | Established | ||
Bradford | Reported | ||
Brevard | Established | N-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Brevard | Reported | ||
Broward | Reported | ||
Calhoun | Established | ||
Charlotte | Reported | ||
Citrus | Reported | ||
Clay | Established | ||
Collier | Established | ||
Columbia | Established | ||
DeSoto | Established | N-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Dixie | Established | ||
Duval | Reported | ||
Escambia | Established | ||
Flagler | Established | ||
Franklin | Established | ||
Gadsden | Established | ||
Gilchrist | Reported | N-R | K. Sayler, unpublished |
Glades | Established | ||
Gulf | Established | ||
Hamilton | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Hardee | Reported | ||
Hendry | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Hernando | Established | ||
Highlands | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Hillsborough | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Holmes | Reported | N-R | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Indian River | Established | N-E | C. Lord, unpublished |
Jackson | Established | ||
Jefferson | Established | ||
Lafayette | Established | ||
Lake | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Lee | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Leon | Established | ||
Levy | Established | R-E | K. Sayler, unpublished |
Liberty | Established | ||
Madison | Established | N-E | K. Sayler, unpublished |
Manatee | Reported | ||
Marion | Established | ||
Martin | Established | ||
Miami-Dade | Established | ||
Monroe | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Nassau | Established | ||
Okaloosa | Established | ||
Okeechobee | Established | N-E | Wisely, Cleveland, Satterlee, and Lord, unpublished |
Orange | Established | ||
Osceola | Established | ||
Palm Beach | Established | ||
Pasco | Reported | ||
Pinellas | Established | N-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Polk | Established | ||
Putnam | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Santa Rosa | Established | ||
Sarasota | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Seminole | Established | R-E | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
St. Johns | Reported | ||
St. Lucie | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Sumter | Established | ||
Suwannee | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Taylor | Established | ||
Union | Reported | ||
Volusia | Established | ||
Wakulla | Established | ||
Walton | Established | ||
Washington | Reported | N-R | J. Corn/SCWDS, unpublished; J. Mertins/NVSL, unpublished |
Georgia | |||
Appling | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Atkinson | Reported | ||
Bacon | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Baker | Reported | ||
Baldwin | Reported | ||
Bibb | Reported | ||
Bleckley | Established | ||
Brantley | Established | ||
Brooks | Reported | ||
Bryan | Reported | ||
Bulloch | Established | ||
Burke | Established | R-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Calhoun | Reported | ||
Camden | Reported | ||
Candler | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Charlton | Established | ||
Chatham | Established | ||
Chattahoochee | Reported | ||
Clarke | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Clinch | Established | ||
Coffee | Reported | ||
Columbia | Reported | ||
Cook | Reported | ||
Crisp | Reported | ||
Decatur | Reported | ||
Dougherty | Established | ||
Echols | Reported | ||
Effingham | Established | ||
Emanuel | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Evans | Established | R-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Forsyth | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Glynn | Established | ||
Grady | Established | ||
Hancock | Reported | ||
Houston | Established | ||
Irwin | Established | ||
Jasper | Established | ||
Jeff Davis | Reported | ||
Jefferson | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Jenkins | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Johnson | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Jones | Reported | ||
Laurens | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Liberty | Established | ||
Long | Reported | ||
Lowndes | Established | ||
McDuffie | Established | ||
McIntosh | Established | ||
Monroe | Established | ||
Montgomery | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Morgan | Reported | ||
Muscogee | Reported | ||
Pierce | Reported | ||
Pulaski | Reported | ||
Putnam | Established | ||
Talbot | Established | ||
Taliaferro | Reported | ||
Tattnall | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Telfair | Established | ||
Terrell | Reported | ||
Thomas | Established | ||
Tift | Reported | N-R | L. Durden, unpublished |
Toombs | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Treutlen | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Twiggs | Reported | ||
Ware | Established | ||
Washington | Established | N-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Wayne | Reported | ||
Wilkes | Reported | ||
Wilkinson | Reported | ||
Illinois | |||
Boone | Reported | ||
Brown | Reported | ||
Bureau | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006) |
Carroll | Established | ||
Cass | Reported | N-R | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006) |
Champaign | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Clark | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Coles | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Cook | Established | R-E | (Rydzewski et al. 2012); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Crawford | Reported | ||
Cumberland | Reported | ||
De Witt | Established | N-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
DuPage | Established | R-E | (Rydzewski et al. 2012); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Edgar | Reported | ||
Fayette | Reported | ||
Franklin | Reported | ||
Fulton | Established | N-E | (Cortinas et al. 2002)); (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Gallatin | Reported | ||
Grundy | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Henry | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Iroquois | Reported | ||
Jackson | Reported | ||
Jo Daviess | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Kankakee | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Knox | Reported | ||
Lake | Established | N-E | (Rydzewski et al. 2012); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
La Salle | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Lawrence | Reported | ||
Lee | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Macoupin | Established | N-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Madison | Reported | ||
Marshall | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Mason | Established | N-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
McDonough | Established | N-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
McHenry | Reported | ||
McLean | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Menard | Reported | ||
Mercer | Reported | ||
Monroe | Established | ||
Montgomery | Reported | N-R | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Morgan | Reported | N-R | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006) |
Ogle | Established | ||
Peoria | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Perry | Reported | ||
Piatt | Established | R-E | (Rydzewski et al. 2011); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Pope | Reported | ||
Putnam | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Randolph | Reported | ||
Rock Island | Established | ||
Saline | Reported | ||
Sangamon | Reported | ||
Schuyler | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006) |
Scott | Reported | ||
Shelby | Established | N-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
St. Clair | Reported | ||
Stephenson | Reported | ||
Tazewell | Established | R-E | (Cortinas et al. 2002, Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Union | Reported | ||
Vermilion | Established | N-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Wabash | Established | N-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Will | Established | R-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Williamson | Reported | ||
Winnebago | Established | R-E | http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Woodford | Established | N-E | (Cortinas and Kitron 2006); http://www.idph.state.il.us/envhealth/pdf/Deer_Tick_Range.pdf |
Indiana | |||
Adams | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Bartholomew | Established | R-E | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Benton | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Boone | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Brown | Reported | ||
Carroll | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Cass | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Clark | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Clay | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Daviess | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Dearborn | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Dubois | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Elkhart | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Fountain | Reported | ||
Franklin | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Fulton | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Grant | Reported | ||
Greene | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Hamilton | Reported | N-R | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Hendricks | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Howard | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Huntington | Reported | ||
Jasper | Established | ||
Jefferson | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Jennings | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Johnson | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Knox | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Kosciusko | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
LaGrange | Reported | ||
Lake | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
LaPorte | Established | ||
Lawrence | Reported | N-R | |
Madison | Reported | ||
Marshall | Reported | ||
Martin | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Monroe | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Montgomery | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished d |
Morgan | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Newton | Established | ||
Orange | Reported | ||
Owen | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Parke | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Pike | Reported | ||
Porter | Established | ||
Posey | Reported | ||
Pulaski | Established | ||
Putnam | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Randolph | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Ripley | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Shelby | Reported | N-R | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
St. Joseph | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Starke | Established | ||
Steuben | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Sullivan | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Switzerland | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Tippecanoe | Established | R-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Union | Reported | N-R | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Vanderburgh | Reported | N-R | R. Pinger, unpublished |
Vermillion | Reported | ||
Vigo | Established | ||
Wabash | Reported | ||
Warren | Established | N-E | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Warrick | Reported | ||
Washington | Reported | ||
White | Established | ||
Whitley | Reported | N-R | (Raizman et al. 2012); E. Raizman, unpublished |
Iowa | |||
Benton | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Bremer | Established | ||
Buena Vista | Reported | ||
Calhoun | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Cedar | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Cerro Gordo | Established | ||
Clayton | Reported | ||
Clinton | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Crawford | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Dallas | Reported | ||
Delaware | Reported | ||
DesMoines | Established | ||
Dubuque | Reported | ||
Fayette | Reported | ||
Floyd | Reported | ||
Greene | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Guthrie | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Hancock | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Iowa | Reported | ||
Jackson | Established | ||
Jasper | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Johnson | Established | R-E | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Keokuk | Established | N-E | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Kossuth | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Linn | Established | ||
Louisa | Reported | ||
Marshall | Reported | ||
Muscatine | Established | ||
Palo Alto | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Polk | Established | R-E | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Scott | Established | R-E | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Story | Established | R-E | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Tama | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Washington | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Webster | Established | R-E | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Winnebago | Reported | ||
Winneshiek | Established | R-E | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Woodbury | Reported | N-R | (Lingren et al. 2005) |
Kansas | |||
Bourbon | Reported | ||
Chautauqua | Reported | ||
Cherokee | Reported | ||
Coffey | Reported | ||
Cowley | Reported | ||
Crawford | Reported | ||
Douglas | Established | ||
Jefferson | Reported | ||
Johnson | Reported | ||
Labette | Reported | ||
Linn | Reported | ||
Miami | Reported | ||
Montgomery | Reported | ||
Riley | Reported | ||
Shawnee | Reported | ||
Kentucky | |||
Ballard | Reported | ||
Boone | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Carroll | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Christian | Reported | ||
Clay | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Estill | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Fayette | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Hancock | Reported | N-R | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Hardin | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Jackson | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Knox | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Lee | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
McCreary | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Meade | Established | N-E | B. Pagac and M. Miller, unpublished |
Owsley | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Pulaski | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Trimble | Established | N-E | L. Townsend, unpublished |
Warren | Reported | N-R | (Onwu 2012) |
Louisiana | |||
Allen | Established | ||
Avoyelles | Established | ||
Bienville | Established | ||
Bossier | Reported | ||
Caldwell | Established | ||
Catahoula | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
Claiborne | Reported | ||
Concordia | Established | ||
DeSoto | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
East Baton Rouge | Reported | ||
East Carroll | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
Grant | Established | ||
Jackson | Established | ||
Jefferson Davis | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
Lafayette | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
Lincoln | Established | ||
Madison | Reported | ||
Morehouse | Established | ||
Natchitoches | Established | ||
Ouachita | Reported | ||
Pointe Coupee | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
Rapides | Reported | ||
Sabine | Reported | ||
St. John the Baptist | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
St. Landry | Reported | ||
St. Martin | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
St. Mary | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
St. Tammany | Reported | ||
Tangipahoa | Reported | ||
Tensas | Reported | ||
Union | Established | ||
Vermilion | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
Vernon | Established | ||
Washington | Reported | N-R | (Mackay and Foil 2005) |
Winn | Reported | ||
Maine | |||
Androscoggin | Established | ||
Aroostook | Established | R-E | http://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/infectious-disease/epi/vector-borne/lyme/documents/2014-lyme-legislature.pdf |
Cumberland | Established | ||
Franklin | Established | R-E | http://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/infectious-disease/epi/vector-borne/lyme/documents/2014-lyme-legislature.pdf |
Hancock | Established | ||
Kennebec | Established | ||
Knox | Established | ||
Lincoln | Established | ||
Oxford | Established | ||
Penobscot | Established | ||
Piscataquis | Established | R-E | http://www.maine.gov/dhhs/mecdc/infectious-disease/epi/vector-borne/lyme/documents/2014-lyme-legislature.pdf |
Sagadahoc | Established | ||
Somerset | Established | ||
Waldo | Established | ||
Washington | Established | ||
York | Established | ||
Maryland | |||
Allegany | Reported | ||
Anne Arundel | Established | ||
Baltimore City | |||
Baltimore | Established | ||
Calvert | Established | ||
Caroline | Established | ||
Carroll | Established | ||
Cecil | Established | ||
Charles | Established | ||
Dorchester | Established | ||
Frederick | Established | ||
Garrett | Reported | ||
Harford | Established | ||
Howard | Established | ||
Kent | Established | ||
Montgomery | Established | ||
Prince George’s | Established | ||
Queen Anne’s | Established | ||
Somerset | Established | ||
St. Mary’s | Established | ||
Talbot | Established | ||
Washington | Established | ||
Wicomico | Established | ||
Worcester | Established | ||
Massachusetts | |||
Barnstable | Established | ||
Berkshire | Established | R-E | http://stats.tickdiseases.org/ |
Bristol | Established | ||
Dukes | Established | ||
Essex | Established | ||
Franklin | Established | ||
Hampden | Established | ||
Hampshire | Established | ||
Middlesex | Established | R-E | http://stats.tickdiseases.org/ |
Nantucket | Established | ||
Norfolk | Established | N-E | http://stats.tickdiseases.org/ |
Plymouth | Established | ||
Suffolk | Established | N-E | http://stats.tickdiseases.org/ |
Worcester | Established | R-E | http://stats.tickdiseases.org/ |
Michigan | |||
Alger | Reported | N-R | (Schaar 2012) |
Allegan | Established | R-E | (Foster 2004, Hamer et al. 2010) |
Baraga | Reported | ||
Barry | Established | N-E | J. Tsao, S. Hamer, I. Arsnoe, and G. Hickling, unpublished |
Benzie | Established | N-E | (Hamer et al. 2010); J. Sidge unpublished |
Berrien | Established | ||
Cass | Established | N-E | (Hamer et al. 2009); E. Foster, unpublished |
Charlevoix | Established | N-E | E. Foster and J. Sidge, unpublished |
Chippewa | Established | ||
Clinton | Reported | ||
Delta | Established | ||
Dickinson | Established | R-E | I. Arsnoe, unpublished |
Emmet | Reported | N-R | J. Sidge, unpublished |
Genesee | Reported | ||
Gogebic | Established | ||
Hillsdale | Reported | N-R | E. Foster, and J. Tsao, unpublished |
Houghton | Reported | ||
Ingham | Established | R-E | E. Foster, and J. Tsao, unpublished |
Ionia | Established | N-E | (Hamer et al. 2010) |
Iron | Reported | N-R | (Walker et al. 1998) |
Jackson | Reported | ||
Kalamazoo | Established | N-E | J. Tsao and G. Hickling, unpublished |
Kent | Reported | ||
Lapeer | Reported | ||
Leelanau | Established | R-E | E. Foster, J. Tsao and J. Sidge, unpublished |
Livingston | Reported | ||
Mackinac | Reported | ||
Manistee | Established | R-E | (Hamer et al. 2010) |
Marquette | Reported | ||
Mason | Established | N-E | J. Tsao and J. Sidge, unpublished |
Menominee | Established | ||
Midland | Reported | ||
Muskegon | Established | R-E | (Hamer et al. 2009, Hamer et al. 2010) |
Oakland | Reported | ||
Oceana | Established | R-E | J. Tsao, and J. Sidge, unpublished |
Ontonagon | Established | R-E | E. Foster, unpublished |
Ottawa | Established | R-E | (Hamer et al. 2009); E. Foster, unpublished |
Schoolcraft | Established | R-E | I. Arsnoe, unpublished |
St. Joseph | Established | N-E | J. Tsao and E. Foster, unpublished |
Van Buren | Established | N-E | (Foster 2004, Hamer et al. 2009, Hamer et al. 2014) |
Minnesota | |||
Aitkin | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Anoka | Established | ||
Becker | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Beltrami | Established | R-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Benton | Established | N-E | T. Johnson and D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Brown | Reported | N-R | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Carlton | Established | R-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Carver | Established | ||
Cass | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000) |
Chisago | Established | ||
Clearwater | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Cook | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Crow Wing | Established | R-E | |
Dakota | Established | ||
Douglas | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Fillmore | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Goodhue | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Hennepin | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Houston | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Hubbard | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Isanti | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Itasca | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000) |
Kanabec | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Kandiyohi | Established | N-E | (Diuk-Wasser et al. 2006); D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Koochiching | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000) |
Lake | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Lake of the Woods | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Mahnomen | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Mille Lacs | Established | R-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000) |
Morrison | Established | ||
Nicollet | Reported | N-R | T. Johnson and D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Olmsted | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Otter Tail | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Pine | Established | ||
Pope | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Ramsey | Established | ||
Rice | Reported | N-R | T. Johnson and D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Scott | Established | ||
Sherburne | Established | N-E | (Diuk-Wasser et al. 2006), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Sibley | Established | N-E | T. Johnson and D. Neitzel, unpublished |
St. Louis | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Stearns | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Todd | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Wabasha | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Wadena | Established | N-E | (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Washington | Established | ||
Winona | Established | R-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Wright | Established | N-E | D. Neitzel, unpublished |
Mississippi | |||
Adams | Reported | ||
Alcorn | Reported | ||
Amite | Reported | ||
Attala | Reported | ||
Benton | Reported | ||
Bolivar | Established | ||
Calhoun | Reported | ||
Carroll | Reported | ||
Chickasaw | Reported | ||
Choctaw | Reported | ||
Claiborne | Reported | ||
Clarke | Reported | ||
Clay | Reported | ||
Coahoma | Reported | ||
Copiah | Established | ||
Covington | Reported | ||
DeSoto | Reported | ||
Forrest | Reported | ||
Franklin | Reported | ||
George | Reported | ||
Greene | Reported | ||
Grenada | Reported | ||
Hancock | Reported | ||
Harrison | Reported | ||
Hinds | Established | ||
Holmes | Reported | ||
Humphreys | Reported | ||
Issaquena | Reported | ||
Itawamba | Reported | ||
Jackson | Established | ||
Jasper | Reported | ||
Jefferson | Reported | ||
Jefferson Davis | Reported | ||
Jones | Reported | ||
Kemper | Reported | ||
Lafayette | Reported | ||
Lamar | Reported | ||
Lauderdale | Reported | ||
Lawrence | Reported | ||
Leake | Reported | ||
Lee | Reported | ||
Leflore | Reported | ||
Lincoln | Reported | ||
Lowndes | Reported | ||
Madison | Reported | ||
Marion | Reported | ||
Marshall | Established | R-E | (Goltz and Goddard 2013, Goltz et al. 2013) |
Monroe | Reported | ||
Montgomery | Reported | ||
Neshoba | Reported | ||
Newton | Reported | ||
Noxubee | Established | ||
Oktibbeha | Established | ||
Panola | Reported | ||
Pearl River | Reported | ||
Perry | Established | ||
Pike | Reported | ||
Pontotoc | Reported | ||
Prentiss | Reported | ||
Quitman | Reported | ||
Rankin | Established | ||
Scott | Established | ||
Sharkey | Reported | ||
Simpson | Reported | ||
Smith | Reported | ||
Stone | Reported | ||
Sunflower | Reported | ||
Tallahatchie | Reported | ||
Tate | Reported | ||
Tippah | Reported | ||
Tishomingo | Reported | ||
Tunica | Reported | ||
Union | Reported | ||
Walthall | Reported | ||
Warren | Reported | ||
Washington | Reported | ||
Wayne | Reported | ||
Webster | Reported | ||
Wilkinson | Reported | ||
Winston | Established | ||
Yalobusha | Reported | ||
Yazoo | Reported | ||
Missouri | |||
Adair | Established | N-E | S. Fore and H.-J. Kim, unpublished |
Benton | Established | ||
Bollinger | Established | ||
Boone | Reported | ||
Callaway | Established | ||
Cape Girardeau | Established | R-E | (Kollars et al. 1997, Kollars et al. 1999) |
Clark | Reported | ||
Dallas | Established | ||
Dent | Established | ||
Douglas | Established | ||
Gasconade | Established | ||
Greene | Established | ||
Howell | Established | ||
Jasper | Established | ||
Johnson | Established | ||
Laclede | Established | ||
Montgomery | Reported | ||
New Madrid | Reported | ||
Newton | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Osage | Established | ||
Pulaski | Established | ||
Scott | Reported | ||
St. Charles | Established | ||
St. Clair | Reported | ||
St. Louis | Reported | ||
Stoddard | Established | ||
Stone | Established | ||
Taney | Established | ||
Texas | Established | ||
Wayne | Established | ||
Webster | Established | ||
Nebraska | |||
Cass | Reported | N-R | (Cortinas and Spomer 2014) |
Lancaster | Reported | N-R | (Cortinas and Spomer 2014) |
Pawnee | Reported | N-R | (Cortinas and Spomer 2014) |
New Hampshire | |||
Belknap | Established | R-E | http://www.dhhs.nh.gov/dphs/cdcs/lyme/documents/tick-borne-bulletin-2014.pdf |
Carroll | Established | R-E | http://www.dhhs.nh.gov/dphs/cdcs/lyme/documents/tick-borne-bulletin-2014.pdf |
Cheshire | Established | R-E | http://www.dhhs.nh.gov/dphs/cdcs/lyme/documents/tick-borne-bulletin-2014.pdf |
Coos | Reported | ||
Grafton | Established | ||
Hillsborough | Established | ||
Merrimack | Established | ||
Rockingham | Established | ||
Strafford | Established | ||
Sullivan | Established | R-E | http://www.dhhs.nh.gov/dphs/cdcs/lyme/documents/tick-borne-bulletin-2014.pdf |
New Jersey | |||
Atlantic | Established | ||
Bergen | Established | ||
Burlington | Established | ||
Camden | Established | ||
Cape May | Established | ||
Cumberland | Established | ||
Essex | Established | ||
Gloucester | Established | ||
Hudson | Established | ||
Hunterdon | Established | ||
Mercer | Established | ||
Middlesex | Established | ||
Monmouth | Established | ||
Morris | Established | ||
Ocean | Established | ||
Passaic | Established | ||
Salem | Established | ||
Somerset | Established | ||
Sussex | Established | ||
Union | Established | ||
Warren | Established | ||
New York | |||
Albany | Established | ||
Allegany | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Bronx | Established | ||
Broome | Established | ||
Cattaraugus | Established | ||
Cayuga | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Chautauqua | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Chemung | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Chenango | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Clinton | Established | ||
Columbia | Established | ||
Cortland | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Delaware | Established | ||
Dutchess | Established | ||
Erie | Established | ||
Essex | Established | ||
Franklin | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Fulton | Established | ||
Genesee | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Greene | Established | ||
Hamilton | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Herkimer | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Jefferson | Established | ||
Kings | Established | ||
Lewis | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Livingston | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Madison | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Monroe | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Montgomery | Established | ||
Nassau | Established | ||
New York | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Niagara | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Oneida | Established | ||
Onondaga | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Ontario | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Orange | Established | ||
Orleans | Reported | N-R | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Oswego | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Otsego | Established | ||
Putnam | Established | ||
Queens | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Rensselaer | |||
Richmond | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Rockland | Established | ||
Saratoga | Established | ||
Schenectady | Established | ||
Schoharie | Established | ||
Schuyler | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Seneca | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
St. Lawrence | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Steuben | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Suffolk | Established | ||
Sullivan | Established | ||
Tioga | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Tompkins | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Ulster | Established | ||
Warren | Established | ||
Washington | Established | ||
Wayne | Established | N-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Westchester | Established | ||
Wyoming | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
Yates | Established | R-E | M. Prusinski/New York Department of Health, unpublished |
North Carolina | |||
Alamance | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Anson | Reported | ||
Beaufort | Established | ||
Bertie | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Bladen | Established | ||
Brunswick | Established | ||
Camden | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Carteret | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Catawba | Reported | ||
Chatham | Established | R-E | (Smith et al. 2010) |
Chowan | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Columbus | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Craven | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Cumberland | Established | ||
Currituck | Reported | ||
Dare | Established | ||
Duplin | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Durham | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Edgecombe | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Forsyth | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Gates | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Granville | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished; http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Greene | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Guilford | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Halifax | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Harnett | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Haywood | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Hertford | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Hoke | Established | ||
Hyde | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Johnston | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Jones | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Lenoir | Reported | ||
Martin | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Mecklenburg | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Moore | Reported | ||
Nash | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
New Hanover | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Onslow | Established | ||
Orange | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Pamlico | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Pasquotank | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Pender | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Perquimans | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Pitt | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Randolph | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Robeson | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Rowan | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Rutherford | Reported | ||
Sampson | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Scotland | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Stokes | Established | N-E | (Sakamoto et al. 2014); B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Surry | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Tyrrell | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Vance | Reported | N-R | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Wake | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Warren | Established | N-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Washington | Established | R-E | B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
Wayne | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished; B. Harrison/NCPHPMc, unpublished |
North Dakota | |||
Bottineau | Established | N-E | M. Feist and J. Vaughan, unpublished |
Eddy | Established | N-E | (Russart et al. 2014) |
GrandForks | Established | N-E | (Russart et al. 2014, Stone et al. 2015) |
Pembina | Established | N-E | (Russart et al. 2014) |
Ramsey | Established | N-E | (Russart et al. 2014) |
Ransom | Reported | N-R | M. Feist and J. Vaughan, unpublished |
Rolette | Reported | N-R | (Russart et al. 2014) |
Steele | Reported | N-R | (Russart et al. 2014) |
Ohio | |||
Adams | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Ashland | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Ashtabula | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Athens | Reported | N-R | (Wang et al. 2014), http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Auglaize | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Belmont | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Brown | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Butler | Reported | ||
Carroll | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Clermont | Reported | ||
Columbiana | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Coshocton | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Cuyahoga | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Delaware | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Erie | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Fairfield | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Fayette | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Franklin | Reported | N-R | R. Gary, unpublished; http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Gallia | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Geauga | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Greene | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Guernsey | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Hamilton | Established | R-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Harrison | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Highland | Reported | N-R | (Wang et al. 2014), http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Hocking | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Holmes | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Jackson | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Jefferson | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Knox | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Lake | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Lawrence | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Licking | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Lucas | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Madison | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Mahoning | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Medina | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Meigs | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Monroe | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Montgomery | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Morgan | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Morrow | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Muskingum | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Noble | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Ottawa | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Paulding | Reported | N-R | |
Perry | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Pickaway | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Pike | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Portage | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Richland | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Ross | Established | N-E | (Wang et al. 2014), R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Scioto | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Stark | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Summit | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Trumbull | Established | N-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Tuscarawas | Reported | N-R | (Wang et al. 2014),http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Union | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Vinton | Reported | N-R | (Wang et al. 2014), http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Warren | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Washington | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Wayne | Established | R-E | R. Gary/Ohio Department of Health, unpublished |
Williams | Reported | ||
Wood | Reported | N-R | http://www.odh.ohio.gov/lyme |
Oklahoma | |||
Adair | Reported | ||
Atoka | Reported | ||
Caddo | Reported | ||
Carter | Reported | ||
Cherokee | Established | ||
Coal | Reported | ||
Comanche | Reported | ||
Creek | Reported | ||
Delaware | Reported | ||
Garfield | Reported | ||
Garvin | Reported | ||
Haskell | Reported | ||
Hughes | Reported | ||
Johnston | Reported | ||
Latimer | Reported | ||
Le Flore | Established | ||
Lincoln | Reported | ||
Love | Reported | ||
Mayes | Reported | ||
McClain | Established | ||
McCurtain | Reported | ||
McIntosh | Reported | ||
Murray | Reported | ||
Muskogee | Reported | ||
Oklahoma | Reported | ||
Okmulgee | Reported | ||
Ottawa | Reported | ||
Pawnee | Reported | ||
Payne | Reported | ||
Pittsburg | Reported | ||
Pontotoc | Reported | ||
Pottawatomie | Reported | ||
Pushmataha | Reported | ||
Rogers | Reported | ||
Seminole | Reported | ||
Sequoyah | Reported | ||
Tulsa | Reported | ||
Wagoner | Reported | ||
Washington | Reported | ||
Pennsylvania | |||
Adams | Established | R-E | (Han et al. 2014, Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Allegheny | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Armstrong | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Beaver | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Bedford | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Berks | Established | ||
Blair | Established | ||
Bradford | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Bucks | Established | ||
Butler | Established | ||
Cambria | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Cameron | Established | ||
Carbon | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Centre | Established | ||
Chester | Established | ||
Clarion | Established | ||
Clearfield | Established | ||
Clinton | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Columbia | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Crawford | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Cumberland | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Dauphin | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Delaware | Established | ||
Elk | Established | ||
Erie | Established | ||
Fayette | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Forest | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Franklin | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Fulton | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Greene | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Huntingdon | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Indiana | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Jefferson | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Juniata | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Lackawanna | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Lancaster | Established | ||
Lawrence | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Lebanon | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Lehigh | Established | ||
Luzerne | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Lycoming | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
McKean | Established | ||
Mercer | Established | ||
Mifflin | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Monroe | Established | ||
Montgomery | Established | ||
Montour | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Northampton | Established | ||
Northumberland | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Perry | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Philadelphia | Established | ||
Pike | Established | ||
Potter | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Schuylkill | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Snyder | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Somerset | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Sullivan | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Susquehanna | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Tioga | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Union | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Venango | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Warren | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Washington | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Wayne | Established | ||
Westmoreland | Established | R-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
Wyoming | Established | N-E | (Hutchinson et al. 2015) |
York | Established | ||
Rhode Island | |||
Bristol | Established | ||
Kent | Established | ||
Newport | Established | ||
Providence | Established | ||
Washington | Established | ||
South Carolina | |||
Abbeville | Reported | ||
Aiken | Established | ||
Allendale | Reported | ||
Anderson | Reported | ||
Barnwell | Established | ||
Beaufort | Established | ||
Berkeley | Established | ||
Calhoun | Reported | N-R | (Williams et al. 1999) |
Charleston | Established | ||
Chester | Established | ||
Chesterfield | Reported | N-R | (Williams et al. 1999) |
Colleton | Reported | ||
Darlington | Reported | ||
Dorchester | Reported | ||
Edgefield | Established | ||
Fairfield | Reported | ||
Florence | Established | ||
Georgetown | Established | ||
Greenville | Reported | N-R | (Williams et al. 1999) |
Greenwood | Reported | ||
Hampton | Established | ||
Horry | Reported | ||
Jasper | Established | R-E | L. Durden, unpublished |
Laurens | Reported | ||
McCormick | Established | ||
Newberry | Established | ||
Orangeburg | Reported | ||
Pickens | Reported | ||
Richland | Reported | N-R | (Williams et al. 1999) |
Saluda | Reported | N-R | (Williams et al. 1999) |
Spartanburg | Reported | ||
Sumter | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Union | Established | ||
South Dakota | |||
Brookings | Reported | ||
Codington | Reported | ||
Tennessee | |||
Anderson | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Bedford | Established | R-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Bledsoe | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Campbell | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Claiborne | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Clay | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Coffee | Established | N-E | G. Hickling, unpublished |
Cumberland | Reported | N-R | (Harmon et al. 2011, Rosen et al. 2012) |
Davidson | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
DeKalb | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Fayette | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012, Mays et al. 2014) |
Fentress | Reported | ||
Franklin | Established | N-E | G. Hickling, unpublished |
Giles | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Grainger | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Hamilton | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Henry | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Humphreys | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Jackson | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Knox | Established | N-E | G. Hickling, unpublished |
Lake | Reported | ||
Lauderdale | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Lawrence | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Loudon | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Marion | Established | R-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Marshall | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Maury | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Montgomery | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Obion | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Pickett | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Rhea | Established | N-E | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Roane | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Rutherford | Reported | ||
Scott | Reported | ||
Sequatchie | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Shelby | Established | ||
Stewart | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Sumner | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Tipton | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Warren | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Wayne | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
White | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Williamson | Reported | N-R | (Rosen et al. 2012) |
Texas | |||
Anderson | Established | ||
Angelina | Established | ||
Aransas | Established | ||
Austin | Reported | ||
Bandera | Reported | ||
Bastrop | Reported | ||
Bell | Established | ||
Bexar | Established | ||
Blanco | Reported | N-R | S. Hamer, unpublished |
Bowie | Reported | ||
Brazoria | Established | ||
Brazos | Established | R-E | (Sanders et al. 2013, Rodriguez et al. 2015) |
Cameron | Reported | N-R | (Feria-Arroyo et al. 2014) |
Cass | Established | ||
Cherokee | Established | ||
Colorado | Reported | ||
Coryell | Reported | N-R | (Sanders et al. 2013) |
Dallas | Reported | ||
Edwards | Reported | ||
FortBend | Reported | ||
Franklin | Reported | ||
Freestone | Established | N-E | S. Hamer, unpublished |
Grayson | Reported | ||
Gregg | Reported | ||
Hamilton | Reported | ||
Harris | Established | ||
Harrison | Reported | ||
Hays | Reported | ||
Henderson | Established | ||
Hidalgo | Reported | N-R | (Feria-Arroyo et al. 2014) |
Houston | Reported | ||
Hunt | Reported | ||
Jasper | Established | ||
Jefferson | Reported | ||
Kerr | Reported | ||
Kleberg | Reported | ||
Lamar | Reported | ||
Lampasas | Reported | ||
Lavaca | Established | ||
Leon | Established | ||
Liberty | Reported | ||
Llano | Reported | ||
Marion | Established | ||
Mason | Reported | N-R | (Feria-Arroyo et al. 2014) |
Matagorda | Reported | ||
Montgomery | Established | ||
Nacogdoches | Established | ||
Newton | Reported | ||
Palo Pinto | Reported | ||
Parker | Established | ||
Polk | Established | ||
Real | Established | ||
Robertson | Reported | ||
Rusk | Reported | ||
Sabine | Reported | ||
San Augustine | Reported | ||
Shelby | Reported | ||
Smith | Established | ||
Sutton | Reported | ||
Tarrant | Reported | N-R | (Feria-Arroyo et al. 2014) |
Taylor | Reported | ||
Trinity | Established | ||
Tyler | Established | ||
Upshur | Reported | ||
Uvalde | Reported | ||
Victoria | Reported | ||
Walker | Reported | ||
Waller | Established | ||
Washington | Reported | N-R | S. Hamer, unpublished |
Wood | Established | ||
Zavala | Reported | ||
Vermont | |||
Addison | Established | N-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Bennington | Established | R-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Caledonia | Established | R-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Chittenden | Established | R-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Franklin | Established | N-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
GrandIsle | Established | N-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Lamoille | Reported | ||
Orange | Established | N-E | (Serra et al. 2013) |
Orleans | Reported | N-R | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Rutland | Established | R-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Washington | Established | N-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Windham | Established | R-E | https://apps.health.vermont.gov/gis/vttracking/ticktracker/2014Summary/ |
Windsor | Established | ||
Virginia | |||
Accomack | Established | ||
Albemarle | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Alleghany | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Appomattox | Established | N-E | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Arlington | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Augusta | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Bath | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Bedford City | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Bedford | Established | N-E | M. Shanks, D. Gaines, unpublished |
Bland | Established | N-E | M. Shanks, D. Gaines, unpublished |
Brunswick | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Buckingham | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished; R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Caroline | Established | ||
Charles City | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished; R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Chesapeake | Established | ||
Chesterfield | Established | N-E | (Kelly et al. 2014) |
Craig | Established | N-E | M. Shanks, D. Gaines, unpublished |
Culpeper | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished; http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Cumberland | Reported | N-R | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Dinwiddie | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Essex | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Fairfax | Established | ||
Fauquier | Established | R-E | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Floyd | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Fluvanna | Established | N-E | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Franklin | Established | N-E | M. Shanks, D. Gaines, unpublished |
Frederick | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Giles | Established | N-E | (Herrin et al. 2014) |
Gloucester | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished; http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Goochland | Established | N-E | (Kelly et al. 2014) |
Greensville | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Hampton | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Hanover | Reported | N-R | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Henrico | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Isle of Wight | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished |
James City | Established | N-E | (Kelly et al. 2014); H. Gaff, unpublished |
King and Queen | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished |
King George | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished; H. Gaff, unpublished |
Lancaster | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Loudoun | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Lynchburg | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Mecklenburg | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Middlesex | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Montgomery | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Nelson | Established | N-E | Kelly et al. 2014 |
New Kent | Established | N-E | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Newport News | Established | ||
Norfolk | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Northampton | Established | N-E | (Kelly et al. 2014); H. Gaff, unpublished |
Northumberland | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished; http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Portsmouth | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Powhatan | Established | N-E | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Prince Edward | Reported | N-R | R.J. Brinkerhoff, unpublished |
Prince George | Reported | ||
Prince William | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished; http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Pulaski | Established | N-E | (Herrin et al. 2014) |
Rappahannock | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Richmond | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished; H. Gaff, unpublished |
Roanoke | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Rockbridge | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Rockingham | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Shenandoah | Reported | N-R | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Southampton | Established | R-E | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Spotsylvania | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Stafford | Established | ||
Suffolk | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished; H. Gaff, unpublished |
Sussex | Reported | N-R | H. Gaff, unpublished |
Virginia Beach | Established | ||
Warren | Established | N-E | D. Gaines, unpublished |
Washington | Reported | N-R | http://vectormap.nhm.ku.edu/vectormap/ |
Westmoreland | Established | N-E | H. Gaff, unpublished |
York | Established | ||
West Virginia | |||
Barbour | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Berkeley | Established | ||
Boone | Reported | ||
Braxton | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Brooke | Established | N-E | http://www.mamca.org/2014Meeting/0306_0840_SR_WV.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Cabell | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/documents/wv-zd-summary-2014.pdf |
Doddridge | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3 |
Fayette | Reported | N-R | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Gilmer | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Grant | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3 |
Greenbrier | Established | N-E | http://www.mamca.org/2014Meeting/0306_0840_SR_WV.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Hampshire | Reported | N-R | http://www.mamca.org/2014Meeting/0306_0840_SR_WV.pdf |
Hancock | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf |
Hardy | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Harrison | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Jackson | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3 |
Jefferson | Established | ||
Kanawha | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Tick/documents/tickborne-summary-2012.pdf |
Lewis | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth & M. Mark-Carew, unpublished |
Lincoln | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3 |
Logan | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3 |
Marion | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Marshall | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf |
Mercer | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Mineral | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Mosquito/Documents/arbovirus/vectorborne-disease-report.pdf#page=3 |
Monongalia | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Monroe | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Morgan | Reported | ||
Ohio | Reported | N-R | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Pocahontas | Reported | N-R | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Preston | Established | N-E | http://www.mamca.org/2014Meeting/0306_0840_SR_WV.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Putnam | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/documents/wv-zd-summary-2014.pdf |
Raleigh | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Randolph | Reported | N-R | http://www.mamca.org/2014Meeting/0306_0840_SR_WV.pdf |
Ritchie | Reported | N-R | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Summers | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Taylor | Established | N-E | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf; E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Tucker | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/Zoonosis/Tick/documents/tickborne-disease-summary-2013.pdf |
Tyler | Reported | N-R | http://www.dhhr.wv.gov/oeps/disease/zoonosis/documents/wv-zd-summary-2014.pdf |
Upshur | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Wetzel | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Wirt | Established | N-E | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Wood | Reported | N-R | E. Dotseth, unpublished |
Wisconsin | |||
Adams | Established | ||
Ashland | Established | R-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Barron | Established | ||
Bayfield | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Brown | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Buffalo | Established | R-E | (Michalski et al. 2006) |
Burnett | Established | ||
Chippewa | Established | ||
Clark | Established | ||
Columbia | Established | ||
Crawford | Established | ||
Dane | Established | ||
Dodge | Reported | N-R | (Lee et al. 2013) |
Door | Established | R-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Douglas | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished. |
Dunn | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Eau Claire | Established | ||
Florence | Reported | N-R | http://labs.russell.wisc.edu/wisconsin-ticks/presence-of-ixodes-scapularis-on-hunter-killed-deer-in-wisconsin-2008-09/ |
Fond du Lac | Reported | N-R | Lee et al. 2013; http://labs.russell.wisc.edu/wisconsin-ticks/presence-of-ixodes-scapularis-on-hunter-killed-deer-in-wisconsin-2008-09/ |
Forest | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Grant | Established | ||
Green | Established | ||
Green Lake | Established | N-E | (Michalski et al. 2006) |
Iowa | Established | ||
Jackson | Established | ||
Jefferson | Established | R-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Juneau | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Kenosha | Reported | N-R | (Lee et al. 2013) |
La Crosse | Established | ||
Lafayette | Reported | ||
Langlade | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Lincoln | Established | ||
Manitowoc | Reported | ||
Marathon | Established | ||
Marinette | Established | ||
Menominee | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Milwaukee | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Monroe | Established | ||
Oconto | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Oneida | Established | R-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Outagamie | Reported | ||
Ozaukee | Reported | N-R | http://labs.russell.wisc.edu/wisconsin-ticks/presence-of-ixodes-scapularis-on-hunter-killed-deerin-wisconsin-2008-09/ |
Pierce | Reported | N-R | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Polk | Reported | ||
Portage | Established | ||
Price | Established | ||
Racine | Established | ||
Richland | Established | ||
Rock | Established | ||
Rusk | Established | ||
Sauk | Established | ||
Sawyer | Established | ||
Shawano | Reported | N-R | (Lee et al. 2013) |
Sheboygan | Established | R-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
St. Croix | Established | R-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Taylor | Established | ||
Trempealeau | Established | ||
Vernon | Reported | ||
Vilas | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Walworth | Established | R-E | (Caporale et al. 2005, Lee et al. 2013) |
Washburn | Established | ||
Waukesha | Established | R-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Waupaca | Established | N-E | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Waushara | Reported | ||
Winnebago | Reported | ||
Wood | Reported | N-R | S. Paskewitz, unpublished |
Established: Six or more ticks or two or more tick life stages; Reported: Fewer than six ticks and one tick life stage only.
N-R, change from No Records to Reported; N-E, change from No Records to Established; R-E, change from Reported to Established.
NCPHPM: North Carolina Public Health Pest Management, terminated in 2011.
SCWDS: Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study.
National Veterinary Services Laboratories.
The data presented here suggest that I. scapularis over the past two decades has expanded from its northeastern focus northward into upstate New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, and northern Maine; westward across Pennsylvania, eastern Ohio, and New York; and south- and southwestward into West Virginia, Virginia, and North Carolina (Fig. 2). A similar geographic expansion for I. scapularis appears to have occurred from the long-established focus in the North-Central states, with notable spread of counties where the tick is now classified as established in all four cardinal directions (Fig. 2). The two previously distinct foci in the Northeast and North-Central states appear to be merging in the Ohio River Valley to form a single contiguous focus. In striking contrast to the Northeast and North-Central states, in the far South and South- Central states, counties where I. scapularis is classified as established have remained relatively stable since the survey by Dennis et al. (1998) (Figs. 1–2).
Ixodes scapularis is now classified as reported in 578 counties (18.6% of counties in the continental United States) distributed across 30 states (Table 1; Fig. 1). Counties classified as reported for I. scapularis generally clustered around counties classified as established for this tick. The overall ratio of counties in which I. scapularis is classified as established versus reported (established:reported) was 1.41:1 in this study, as compared with 0.71:1 in the previous Dennis et al. (1998) survey.
Counties Where I. pacificus Is Classified as Established or Reported
Ixodes pacificus is now classified as established in 95 counties, and as reported in 16 additional counties, spanning 6 states (Tables 1, 3; Fig. 1). The majority of these counties are in the Pacific Coast states of California, Oregon, and Washington. Our new data mark a very modest increase in the number of western counties in which I. pacificus is classified as established since the survey by Dennis et al. (1998), when the tick was listed as established in 90 counties; the number of counties with reported status remained stable. In total, five counties were updated from either no records (n = 1) or reported (n = 4) to established and four counties were updated from no records to reported (Table 3; Fig. 2). All county status changes occurred in Washington, Oregon, or Utah (Tables 1, 3; Figs. 1–2). The overall ratio of counties in which I. pacificus is classified as established versus reported was 5.94:1 in this study, compared with 5.6:1 (Dennis et al. 1998).
Discussion
Data on the current geographic distributions of medically important tick vectors, such as I. scapularis and I. pacificus, provide information complementary to epidemiological data on geographic disease case occurrence to inform the medical community and the public of where risk for exposure to tick-borne disease agents may occur. The lack of routine systematic surveillance across the continental United States of ticks of public health importance hampers our ability to define their current geographic distributions and to monitor changes in their ranges and densities over time. Although we are able to report in this paper where I. scapularis and I. pacificus are now known to be present at the county level, our certainty in where the tick is absent is low, especially at the edges of their ranges and in regions where they can be assumed to occur only at low densities. Range contractions, if they occurred, were not quantified in this study because counties that were previously considered established maintained that status here. Nonetheless, using survey methods similar to those of Dennis et al. (1998), specifically, literature review and inclusion of unpublished data from individual researchers and state public health departments, we showed a substantial increase over the past nearly two decades in counties classified as having I. scapularis present. Moreover, the number of counties in which I. scapularis is considered established has more than doubled since the previous national distribution map was published (Dennis et al. 1998). The majority of county status changes occurred in the North, while the distribution in the South remained fairly stable. The North-Central focus for I. scapularis in Minnesota and Wisconsin appears to have expanded in all cardinal directions, and the Northeastern focus has spread inland from the Atlantic seaboard and expanded in both northerly and southerly directions. As a result, the two previously distinct foci in the North-Central and Northeastern United States have now converged in the Ohio River Valley to form a single larger focus. In striking contrast to I. scapularis, increases in counties reporting the presence of I. pacificus in the Far West were very modest.
Population genetic analyses provide support for the theory that I. scapularis was once established across the Northeastern and North-Central United States for thousands of years and likely colonized the region following the recession of the Pleistocene ice sheet (Humphrey et al. 2010). Thus, current trends may represent recolonization of the tick’s historical range. Rapid deforestation and suppression of white-tailed deer during the late 1800s and early 1990s may have restricted I. scapularis to focal refugia (Spielman et al. 1985, Lee et al. 2013). Reforestation and increasing abundance of white-tailed deer, the primary hosts of adult I. scapularis (Spielman et al. 1985), are considered to have contributed to the dramatic expansion of the tick’s range over the past half century (Spielman 1994).
Our updated species distribution map shows a continued range expansion for I. scapularis, particularly in northern states. Given the lack of systematic surveillance for I. scapularis, one might ask if the range expansion suggested by our data is real or merely an artifact of enhanced tick surveillance and research activities in some areas. A true range expansion of I. scapularis in northern states, as described in this report, is supported by the largely concordant changes in the distribution of human Lyme disease cases captured through mandatory reporting of the disease since 1991 (Rand et al. 2007, Raizman et al. 2012, Lee et al. 2013, Serra et al. 2013, Brinkerhoff et al. 2014, Robinson et al. 2014, Wang et al. 2014, Kugeler et al. 2015, Mead 2015). Moreover, as detailed later in the text, true range expansions of I. scapularis have been documented in some areas where tick surveillance was conducted routinely during the period of emergence, or where extensive surveys were conducted at discrete time-points spanning periods from when the tick was absent through invasion and establishment.
The North-Central States
Within the North-Central United States, I. scapularis was first described in a focal area of northwestern Wisconsin in the late 1960s (Jackson and DeFoliart 1970). State-wide surveys of adult I. scapularis collected from hunter-killed deer in Wisconsin from 1981–1989 (French et al. 1992) revealed that the tick had become established in western, southern, and focal parts of the north, but no evidence of the tick was found in other areas in the north or southeastern reaches of Wisconsin. Subsequent surveys of hunter-killed deer documented continued expansion into the north during the early 1990s (Riehle and Paskewitz 1996) and eventual invasion of eastern Wisconsin by 2008–2009 (Lee et al. 2013). Ixodes scapularis now appears to be present throughout most of the habitat that is predicted to be suitable for the tick in the state of Wisconsin (Guerra et al. 2002, Diuk-Wasser et al. 2010).
In neighboring Minnesota to the west, I. scapularis was classified as reported or established primarily in counties bordering Wisconsin in the east-central portion of Minnesota in the mid-1990s (Dennis et al. 1998). Opportunistic sampling during 1998–1999 revealed the presence of I. scapularis in additional northern and central Minnesota counties (Sanders and Guilfoile 2000), and new county records from the south-central portion of the state are presented in this report. Paralleling this expansion of the tick’s known range in Minnesota, Robinson et al. (2014) noted increases in both the numbers and geographical distributions of I. scapularis-borne diseases in Minnesota from 1996 through 2011. The north-westerly expansion appears to have continued into eastern North Dakota (Russart et al. 2014, Stone et al. 2015), beyond or near the limit of habitat previously predicted to be suitable for I. scapularis (Estrada-Pena 2002, Brownstein et al. 2003, Diuk-Wasser et al. 2010).
Wisconsin likely served as a primary source for a southerly invasion of I. scapularis into Illinois, specifically along the Rock River corridor (Cortinas and Kitron 2006). Surveys of hunter-killed deer from Illinois conducted from 1988–1996 showed that infested deer were restricted largely to northern counties (Cortinas et al. 2002). However, similar surveys conducted from 1998 to 2003 showed expansion of the tick’s range to more southern counties and noted that I. scapularis densities decreased along a northern to southern gradient, suggesting that Illinois was first colonized in the northwestern and north-central counties, where I. scapularis indeed was first discovered in the state in the late 1980s (Bouseman et al. 1990, Cortinas and Kitron 2006). Populations of I. scapularis in the extreme northeast along the Illinois River speculatively may have originated from established populations in northwestern Indiana (Cortinas and Kitron 2006). In Indiana, where I. scapularis was first collected from deer in northwestern counties in 1987 (Pinger and Glancy 1989), densities of I. scapularis are greatest along the western border and decrease eastward; expansion to eastern counties was observed between 2005 and 2007 (Pinger et al. 1996, Keefe 2008, Raizman et al. 2012).
Hamer et al. (2010) proposed that established I. scapularis populations in Indiana seeded colonization of lower Michigan, where the tick was first discovered in southwestern lower Michigan in 2002 (Foster 2004). Invasion of I. scapularis northward along the coast of Lake Michigan was documented from 2004–2008; in 2004, ticks were collected only from the southernmost of the sampled sites, whereas they were found in all sites by 2008. Tick densities decreased from south to north, supporting a view that densities would be higher in areas where the tick has been longer established. Notably, although inland transects were also surveyed, no evidence of I. scapularis invasion was observed in these transects (Hamer et al. 2010). Subsequently, I. scapularis has been reported also from inland counties in southern Michigan (Table 2). Colonization of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan most likely occurred via northern Wisconsin and preceded colonization of the Lower Peninsula by more than a decade, as I. scapularis was discovered already in the 1980s in Menominee County in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan (Strand et al. 1992, Walker et al. 1994).
The Northeast
Similar to I. scapularis expansion in the North-Central focus, the tick’s range in the northeastern focus appears to have expanded in all directions, except for eastward, where the Atlantic Ocean prevents further spread. Since the survey by Dennis et al. (1998), I. scapularis appears to have expanded northward in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont. In Maine, analysis of public submission of ticks from 1989 to 2006 showed a northerly expansion along the Atlantic coastline, followed by invasion inland along river corridors (Rand et al. 2007). Ixodes scapularis is now considered established in all Maine counties. In Vermont, drag sampling was conducted from June 2011 to June 2012 along a north-south transect following the Connecticut River: densities of I. scapularis generally decreased from south to north, with no ticks collected from the northernmost sites (Serra et al. 2013). Expansion of the tick’s range in these New England states likely contributed, together with increasing tick densities in already established areas, to a 5–10-fold increase in incidence of reported Lyme disease cases in those states during the past decade (Mead 2015).
Since the survey by Dennis et al. (1998), the number of New York counties where I. scapularis is considered established has nearly doubled from 50.0 to 98.4%. At the time of the previous report, the tick was established primarily in the southeastern and eastern portions of the state and appears to have expanded in northerly and westerly directions. In parallel with this observation, from 1990 to 2000, Lyme disease surveillance data revealed a northward and westward expansion in the disease focus from a central cluster in the southeastern portion of the state (i.e., Westchester County). Moreover, during the same timeframe, the primary epidemiological focus shifted northward along the Hudson River (Chen et al. 2005). Population genetic analysis of I. scapularis collected from a transect along the Hudson River from 2004 to 2009 indicated recent rapid expansion of the tick’s range, primarily in a northerly direction along the Hudson River (Khatchikian et al. 2015); expansion appears to be the result of local migration of the ticks, via movements of mammal hosts, but some long-distance migration, perhaps via infestation of birds, was detected. Importantly, the DNA sequence analyses provide evidence for recent range expansion, as opposed to recent detection of in situ populations.
Neighboring New York to the south, Pennsylvania also experienced a recent westward expansion of I. scapularis. In 2003, Lyme disease cases were reported primarily from eastern counties in Pennsylvania. By 2013, human Lyme disease case counts increased markedly in western counties, with cases reported throughout the state (Mead 2015). This mirrors data for range expansion of I. scapularis in Pennsylvania. No I. scapularis were collected during a statewide survey from 1963 to 1967 (Snetsinger 1968), whereas the tick was recorded from 49 of 67 counties by the late 1990s (Dennis et al. 1998). A statewide survey conducted during 2012–2014 (Hutchinson et al. 2015) revealed that the tick now is established in all 67 counties. It is likely that the east-to-west tick expansion across Pennsylvania continued into neighboring Ohio to the west, where active tick surveillance was conducted from 1983 to 2012. Surveillance data showed a dramatic increase in I. scapularis abundance beginning in 2009. Arguing against increasing tick surveillance as a primary source for the observed range expansion in Ohio, the spread of the tick was observed when Ohio’s tick surveillance programs were being considered for termination and their budgets were dwindling (Wang et al. 2014). Currently, the I. scapularis range in Ohio is largely consistent with the range of deciduous forest in the state. As a result of the westward expansion of the previous northeastern focus and the eastward expansion of the previous North-Central focus, the distribution of I. scapularis now appears to be continuous across northern states with convergence of the two previously distinct foci in the Ohio River Valley.
The West Virginia, Virginia, and North Carolina Area
Ixodes scapularis has also expanded its range in West Virginia, where only 4 counties reported the tick previously (Dennis et al. 1998) and now 43 counties are classified as either reported (n = 20) or established (n = 23). Review of Lyme disease and I. scapularis surveillance reports (see references in Table 2) suggests that the tick is expanding westward across the state, with highly Lyme disease endemic counties still focused in the eastern panhandle. Similarly, in Virginia, I. scapularis was considered established primarily in eastern coastal counties previously (Dennis et al. 1998), but the current survey shows the tick to now be established throughout most of Virginia, with the highest densities of openly host-seeking ticks occurring in higher elevation sites (Brinkerhoff et al. 2014, Kelly et al. 2014). The spread of openly host-seeking I. scapularis appears to have proceeded in a southwesterly direction in Virginia, concordant with the expanding geographic distribution of Lyme disease cases and increasing incidence in Virginia (Brinkerhoff et al. 2014, Lantos et al. 2015). Comparison of the previous and current distributions of I. scapularis in North Carolina also suggests an inland incursion of the tick (Fig. 1). One important caveat to these findings for West Virginia, Virginia, and North Carolina is that the observed spread of I. scapularis may have resulted from southerly spread of I. scapularis from states to the north where this tick is more prone, as compared with southern populations, to seek hosts openly from vegetation (Arsnoe et al. 2015) and therefore is more readily contacted by tick dragging or flagging (Diuk-Wasser et al. 2006), or by humans and their pets (Stromdahl and Hickling 2012). Stated differently, this may be an invasion of more easily surveyed northern populations of I. scapularis rather than invasion at the species level in areas where more cryptic southern populations already may have been present but had not been recognized. Regardless, the end result is range expansion of I. scapularis populations that commonly contact and bite humans in West Virginia, Virginia, and North Carolina.
The Allegheny Mountains to Mississippi Valley Area
The authors (Dennis et al. 1998) of the previous survey were intrigued with the lack of I. scapularis records, despite collection efforts, from the Allegheny Mountains to the Mississippi Valley (an area spanning western Pennsylvania southeastward across Kentucky and Tennessee), because of the tick’s large geographical coverage in the eastern United States spanning variable climates and forested habitat types. Habitat suitability modeling suggested that the area ranged from low (Brownstein et al. 2003, Diuk-Wasser et al. 2010) to moderately suitable (Estrada-Pena 2002). Our revised distribution map shows the tick to now be established in this region, attesting to its climate and habitat suitability for I. scapularis. Several studies have documented a trend in which the tick expands along riparian corridors (Cortinas et al. 2002, Cortinas and Kitron 2006, Rand et al. 2007, Hamer et al. 2010, Serra et al. 2013, Kelly et al. 2014, Khatchikian et al. 2015). This provides a hypothesis for how the area from the Allegheny Mountains to the Mississippi Valley could have been or is currently being invaded from areas to the north and east with already established tick populations, first along distinct dispersal corridors followed by more diffuse short-range tick dispersal to suitable habitats across the landscape.
The Southeast
In contrast to the observed concordance between the reported distributions of I. scapularis and human Lyme disease in the North-Central, Northeastern, and Mid-Atlantic States, a wide distribution of this tick vector in the Southeast is not similarly associated with widespread Lyme disease case occurrence (Mead 2015). Lack of concordance in the Southeast could arise for several reasons. First, our map displays a coarse, county-scale representation of where the tick is classified as reported or established. The advantage of the county-scale representation is that it matches the spatial scale at which epidemiological surveillance data are presented. However, in some instances, the vector tick may be established only in limited areas of a particular county, putting very few humans at risk for exposure to tick bites (Eisen and Eisen 2007, Eisen and Eisen 2008). Second, while the presence of at least one tick vector species is a prerequisite for sustaining enzootic transmission of B. burgdorferi, density of B. burgdorferi-infected host-seeking nymphs of a species that commonly bite humans is a better surrogate for human risk of exposure to Lyme disease spirochetes compared with tick presence data alone. At coarse spatial scales such as states or regions of the United States, density of infected I. scapularis nymphs is significantly and positively associated with Lyme disease incidence (Mather et al. 1996, Stafford et al. 1998, Pepin et al. 2012).
A recent systematic field survey of I. scapularis revealed that both the density of host-seeking I. scapularis nymphs and their rate of infection with B. burgdorferi generally were greater in the northern compared with southern states (Diuk-Wasser et al. 2012). This is in agreement with field studies indicating that I. scapularis larvae feed primarily on white-footed mice, Peromyscus leucopus Rafinesque, and other small, highly reservoir-competent mammals in the northeast (Spielman et al. 1985, Giardina et al. 2000), whereas they feed frequently on lizards of, at best, low reservoir-competence for B. burgdorferi in the southeast (Apperson et al. 1993). Moreover, the tick’s host-seeking behavior differs between northern and southern states, such that collection of I. scapularis nymphs by drag sampling (Diuk-Wasser et al. 2006) or from humans (Stromdahl and Hickling 2012) is rare in the south but commonplace in the north. Variable contact rates between humans and nymphal ticks resulting from regional differences in host-seeking behavior could, in large part, explain regional differences in Lyme disease incidence between the northern and southern parts of the eastern United States (Diuk-Wasser et al. 2012, Stromdahl and Hickling 2012, Kelly et al. 2014, Arsnoe et al. 2015). A recent experimental field study showed differences in host-seeking behavior between I. scapularis of northern versus southern origin, such that ticks of northern origin were more likely to ascend vegetation while questing for a host, regardless of whether field release arenas were located in the north or south, suggesting that host-seeking behavior is strongly determined by genetics and to a lesser extent by environmental conditions (Arsnoe et al. 2015). Indeed, population genetic studies show two distinct clades, with the southern clade restricted to the south and the so-called American clade predominant in the north (Norris et al. 1996, Qiu et al. 2002, Humphrey et al. 2010, Van Zee et al. 2013, Sakamoto et al. 2014).
The Far-Western States
The recorded county-level distribution of I. pacificus has changed very little since the previous survey (Dennis et al. 1998). The tick is established primarily in coastal states along the Pacific Ocean (Washington, Oregon, and California), but also can occur locally in especially cool or moist settings in more arid inland states (Arizona, Nevada, and Utah). In contrast to I. scapularis, few studies have sought to define the environmental variables that define the distribution of I. pacificus (Eisen et al. 2006b). Owing in part to sizeable western counties commonly encompassing vast ecological diversity, often with only a portion of a given county presenting risk for human exposure to I. pacificus, there is a lack of concordance between the vector’s range as defined at the county level and the incidence of Lyme disease. For example, in California, although the tick is established in all but three counties, Lyme disease incidence is highest in north-coastal counties (Eisen et al. 2006b). Although B. burgdorferi- infected host-seeking nymphs may be established in limited regions of counties, few humans may be exposed (Eisen et al. 2006b). In addition, densities of host-seeking I. pacificus appear to be much lower in southern (Lane et al. 2013) compared with northern California (Eisen et al. 2006a). Likewise, infection rates with B. burgdorferi also appear to be lower in host-seeking nymphs from southern compared with northern California (Eisen et al. 2010, Lane et al. 2013).
Future Research Needs
The data presented and discussed here provide strong support for systematic sampling to assess the density of host-seeking I. scapularis, and the density of nymphs infected with B. burgdorferi and other I. scapularis-borne human pathogens, in strategic areas where the tick can be expected to invade or increase dramatically in numbers in the near future. We also recognize needs for: 1) improved regional habitat suitability models to better define the likely extent for continued expansion of I. scapularis; 2) population genetic studies aimed at identifying changes in the geographic range of the American clade of I. scapularis, especially in areas previously dominated by the southern clade such as Virginia, and North Carolina where American clade invasion likely results in increased human tick bites; and 3) longitudinal studies aimed at identifying how the convergence of the North-Central and Northeastern tick foci may result in changes in B. burgdorferi genotypes (Pepin et al. 2012), particularly those most likely to cause disease in humans, in the convergence area itself as well as across the North-Central and Northeast states.
Acknowledgments
We thank the following individuals for contributing their unpublished data on collection records for I. scapularis or I. pacificus: I. Arsnoe (Michigan State University), J. Corn (Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study), E. Dotseth (West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources), L. Durden (Georgia Southern University), E. Dykstra (Washington State Department of Health), M. Feist (North Dakota Department of Health), S. Fore (Truman State University), E. Foster (Michigan Department of Health and Human Services), H. Gaff (Old Dominion University), D. Gaines (Virginia Department of Health), R. Gary (Ohio Department of Health), S. Hamer (Texas A&M), B. Harrison (Western Carolina University), G. Hickling (University of Tennessee), T.L. Johnson (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), H.-J. Kim (Truman State University), C. Lord (University of Florida), J. Mertins (National Veterinary Services Laboratory), M. Miller (United States Army Public Health Command), D. Neitzel (Minnesota Department of Health), B. Pagac (United States Army Public Health Command), S. Paskewitz (University of Wisconsin), R. Pinger (Ball State University), M. Prusinski (New York State Department of Health), E. Raizman (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations), K. Sayler (University of Florida), M. Shanks, J. Sidge (Michigan State University), Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study, Unites States Department of Agriculture, L. Townsend (University of Kentucky), J. Tsao (Michigan State University), and J. Vaughn (University of North Dakota).
Contributor Information
Rebecca J. Eisen, Email: dyn2@cdc.gov.
Lars Eisen, Email: evp4@cdc.gov.
Charles B. Beard, Email: cbb0@cdc.gov.
References Cited
- Apperson CS, Levine JF, Evans TL, Braswell A, Heller J. Relative utilization of reptiles and rodents by immature Ixodes scapulris (Acari: Ixodidae) in the coastal plain of North Carolina, USA. Exp. Appl. Acarol. 1993;17:719–731. doi: 10.1007/BF00051830. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Arsnoe IM, Hickling GJ, Ginsberg HS, McElreath R, Tsao JI. Different populations of blacklegged tick nymphs exhibit differences in questing behavior that have implications for human Lyme disease risk. PLoS ONE. 2015;10:e127450. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127450. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Bacon RM, Kugeler KJ, Mead PS. Surveillance for Lyme disease - United States, 1992–2006. Morbid. Mortal. Wkly. Rep. 2008;57:1–9. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Bouseman JK, Kitron U, Kirkpatrick CE, Siegel J, Todd KS. The status of Ixodes dammini (Acari: Ixodidae) in Illinois. J. Med. Entomol. 1990;27:556–560. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/27.4.556. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Brinkerhoff RJ, Gilliam WF, Gaines D. Lyme disease, Virginia, USA, 2000–2011. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 2014;20:1661–1668. doi: 10.3201/eid2010.130782. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Brownstein JS, Holford TR, Fish D. A climate-based model predicts the spatial distribution of the Lyme disease vector Ixodes scapularis in the United States. Environ Health Persp. 2003;111:1152–1157. doi: 10.1289/ehp.6052. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Caporale DA, Johnson CM, Millard BJ. Presence of Borrelia burgdorferi (Spirochaetales: Spirochaetaceae) in Southern Kettle Moraine State Forest, Wisconsin, and characterization of strain W97F51. J. Med. Entomol. 2005;42:457–472. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/42.3.457. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Chen H, White DJ, Caraco TB, Stratton HH. Epidemic and spatial dynamics of Lyme disease in New York State, 1990–2000. J. Med. Entomol. 2005;42:899–908. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/42.5.899. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Cortinas MR, Kitron U. County-level surveillance of white-tailed deer infestation by Ixodes scapularis and Dermacentor albipictus (Acari: Ixodidae) along the Illinois river. J. Med. Entomol. 2006;43:810–819. doi: 10.1603/0022-2585(2006)43[810:csowdi]2.0.co;2. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Cortinas MR, Spomer SM. Occurrence and county-level distribution of ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) in Nebraska using passive surveillance. J. Med. Entomol. 2014;51:352–359. doi: 10.1603/me13122. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Cortinas MR, Guerra MA, Jones CJ, Kitron U. Detection, characterization, and prediction of tick-borne disease foci. Int. J. Med. Microbiol. 2002;291:11–20. doi: 10.1016/s1438-4221(02)80003-0. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Davis R, Ramirez RA, Anderson JL, Bernhardt SA. Distribution and habitat of Ixodes pacificus and prevalence of Borrelia burgdorferi in Utah. J. Med. Entomol. 2015;52:1361–1367. doi: 10.1093/jme/tjv124. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Dennis DT, Nekomoto TS, Victor JC, Paul WS, Piesman J. Reported distribution of Ixodes scapularis and Ixodes pacificus (Acari: Ixodidae) in the United States. J. Med. Entomol. 1998;35:629–638. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/35.5.629. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Diuk-Wasser MA, Gatewood AG, Cortinas MR, Yaremych-Hamer S, Tsao JI, Kitron U, Hickling G, Brownstein JS, Walker E, Piesman J, et al. Spatiotemporal petterns of host-seeking Ixodes scapularis nymphs (Acari: Ixodidae) in the United States. J. Med. Entomol. 2006;43:166–176. doi: 10.1603/0022-2585(2006)043[0166:spohis]2.0.co;2. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Diuk-Wasser MA, Vourc’h G, Cislo P, Hoen AG, Melton F, Hamer SA, Rowland M, Cortinas R, Hickling GJ, Tsao JI, et al. Field and climate-based model for predicting the density of host-seeking nymphal Ixodes scapularis an important vector of tick-borne disease agents in the eastern United States. Glob. Ecol. Biogeogr. 2010;19:504–514. [Google Scholar]
- Diuk-Wasser MA, Gatewood Hoen A, Cislo P, Brinkerhoff R, Hamer SA, Rowland M, Cortinas R, Vourc’h G, Melton F, Hickling GJ, et al. Human risk of infection with Borrelia burgdorferi the Lyme disease agent, in Eastern United States. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 2012;86:320–327. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.2012.11-0395. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Ebel G. Update on Powassan virus: emergence of a North American tick-borne flavivirus. Ann. Rev. Entomol. 2010;55:95–110. doi: 10.1146/annurev-ento-112408-085446. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Eisen L, Eisen RJ. Need for imporved methods to collect and present spatial epidemiologic data for vectorborne diseases. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 2007;13:1816–1820. doi: 10.3201/eid1312.070211. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Eisen RJ, Eisen L. Spatial modeling of human risk of exposure to vector-borne pathogens based on epidemiological versus arthropod vector data. J. Med. Entomol. 2008;45:181–192. doi: 10.1603/0022-2585(2008)45[181:smohro]2.0.co;2. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Eisen RJ, Eisen L, Lane RS. Predicting density of Ixodes pacificus nymphs in dense woodlands in Mendocino County, California, based on geographic information systems and remote sensing versus field-derived data. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 2006a;74:632–640. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Eisen RJ, Lane RS, Fritz CL, Eisen L. Spatial patterns of Lyme disease risk in California based on disease incidence data and modeling of vector-tick exposure. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 2006b;75:669–676. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Eisen RJ, Eisen L, Girard YA, Fedorova N, Mun J, Slikas B, Leonhard S, Kitron U, Lane RS. A spatially-explicit model of acarological risk of exposure to Borrelia burgdorferi - infected Ixodes pacificus nymphs in northwestern California based on woodland type, temperature, and water vapor. Ticks Tick Borne Dis. 2010;1:35–43. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2009.12.002. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Estrada-Pena A. Increasing habitat suitability in the United States for the tick that transmits Lyme disease: A remote sensing approach. Environ. Health Persp. 2002;110:635–640. doi: 10.1289/ehp.110-1240908. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Feria-Arroyo TP, Castro-Arellano I, Gordillo-Perez G, Cavazos AL, Vargas-Sandoval M, Grover A, Torres J, Medina RF, Perez de Leon A, Esteve-Gassent MD. Implications of climate change on the distribution of the tick vector Ixodes scapularis and risk for Lyme disease in the Texas-Mexico transboundary region. Parasites and Vectors. 2014;7:199. doi: 10.1186/1756-3305-7-199. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Foster E. Masters of Science. East Lansing, MI: Michigan State University; 2004. Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) and Borrelia burgdorferi in southwest Michigan: population ecology and verification of a geographic risk model. [Google Scholar]
- French JB, Schell WL, Kazmierczak J, Davis JP. Changes in population density and distribution of Ixodes dammini (Acari: Ixodidae) in Wisconsin during the 1980s. J. Med. Entomol. 1992;29:723–728. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/29.5.723. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Giardina AR, Schmidt KA, Schauber EM, Ostfeld RS. Modeling the role of songbirds and rodents in the ecology of Lyme disease. Can. J. Zool. 2000;78:2184–2197. [Google Scholar]
- Goltz L, Goddard J. Observations on the seasonality of Ixodes scapularis Say in Mississippi, U.S.A. Syst. Appl. Acarol. 2013;18:212–217. [Google Scholar]
- Goltz L, Varela-Stokes A, Goddard J. Survey of adult Ixodes scapularis Say for disease agents in Mississippi. J. Vector Ecol. 2013;38:401–403. doi: 10.1111/j.1948-7134.2013.12056.x. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Guerra MA, Walker E, Jones C, Paskewitz S, Cortinas MR, Stancil A, Beck L, Bobo M, Kitron U. Predicting the risk of Lyme disease: Habitat suitability for Ixodes scapularis in the North Central United States. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 2002;8:289–297. doi: 10.3201/eid0803.010166. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Hamer SA, Tsao JI, Walker ED, Mansfield LS, Foster ES, Hickling GJ. Use of tick surveys and serosurveys to evaluate pet dogs as a sentinel species for emerging Lyme disease. AJVR. 2009;70:49–56. doi: 10.2460/ajvr.70.1.49. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Hamer SA, Tsao JI, Walker ED, Hickling GJ. Invasion of the Lyme disease vector Ixodes scapularis : implications for Borrelia burgdorferi endemicity. EcoHealth. 2010;7:47–63. doi: 10.1007/s10393-010-0287-0. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Hamer SA, Hickling GJ, Walker ED, Tsao JI. Increased diversity of zoonotic pathogens and Borrelia burgdorferi strains in established versus incipient Ixodes scapularis populations across the Midwestern United States. Infect. Genet. Evol. 2014;27:531–542. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2014.06.003. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Han GS, Stromdahl EY, Wong D, Weltman AC. Exposure to Borrelia burgdorferi and other tick-borne pathogens in Gettysburg National Military Park, South-Central Pennsylvania, 2009. Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2014;14:227–233. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2013.1363. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Harmon JR, Hickling GJ, Scott MC, Jones CJ. Evaluation of 4-poster acaricide applicators to mange tick populations associated with diease risk in a Tennessee retirement community. J. Vector Ecol. 2011;36:404–410. doi: 10.1111/j.1948-7134.2011.00181.x. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Herrin BH, Zajac AM, Little SE. Confirmation of Borrelia burgdorferi sensu stricto and Anaplasma phagocytophilum in Ixodes scapularis Southwestern Virginia. Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2014;14:821–823. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2014.1661. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Hinckley AF, Connally NP, Meek JI, Johnson BJ, Kemperman MM, Feldman KA, White JL, Mead PS. Lyme disease testing by large commercial laboratories in the United States. Clin. Infect. Dis. 2014;59:676–681. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciu397. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Humphrey PT, Caporale DA, Brisson D. Uncoordinated phylogeography of Borrelia burgdorferi and its tick vector, Ixodes scapularis. Evolution. 2010;64:2653–2663. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2010.01001.x. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Hutchinson ML, Strohecker MD, Simmons TW, Kyle AD, Helwig MW. Prevalence rates of Borrelia burgdorferi (Spirochaetales: Spirochaetaceae), Anaplasma phagocytophilum (Rickettsiales: Anaplasmataceae), and Babesia microti (Piroplasmida: Babesiidae) in host-seeking Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) from Pennsylvania. J. Med. Entomol. 2015;52:693–698. doi: 10.1093/jme/tjv037. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Jackson JO, DeFoliart GR. Ixodes scapularis Say in northern Wisconsin. J. Med. Entomol. 1970;7:124–125. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/7.1.124. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Keefe LM. Master of Science. West Lafayette Indiana: Purdue University; 2008. The use of harvested white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and geographic information system methods to survey the distribution of Borrelia burgdorferi and its vector Ixodes scapularis in Indiana. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Kelly RR, Gaines D, Gilliam WF, Brinkerhoff RJ. Population genetic structure of the Lyme disease vector Ixodes scapularis at an apparent spatial expansion front. Infect. Genet. Evol. 2014;27:543–550. doi: 10.1016/j.meegid.2014.05.022. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Khatchikian CE, Prusinski MA, Stone M, Backenson PB, Wang I-N, Foley E, Seifert SN, Levy MZ, Brisson D. Recent and rapid population growth and range expansion of the Lyme disease tick vector, Ixodes scapularis in North America. Evolution. 2015;69:1678–1689. doi: 10.1111/evo.12690. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Kollars TM, Durden LA, Masters EJ, Oliver JH. Some factors affecting infestation of white-tailed deer by blacklegged ticks and winter ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) in southeastern Missouri. J. Med. Entomol. 1997;34:372–375. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/34.3.372. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Kollars TM, Oliver JH, Kollars PG, Durden LA. Seasonal activity and host associations of Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) in southeastern Missouri. J. Med. Entomol. 1999;36:720–726. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/36.6.720. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Krause PJ, Fish D, Narasimhan S, Barbour AG. Borrelia miyamotoi infection in nature and in humans. Clin. Microbiol. Infect. 2015;21:631–639. doi: 10.1016/j.cmi.2015.02.006. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Kugeler KJ, Farley GM, Forrester JD, Mead PS. Geographic distribution and expansion of human Lyme disease, United States. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 2015;21:1455–1457. doi: 10.3201/eid2108.141878. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Lane RS, Brown RN, Piesman J, Peavey CA. Vector competence of Ixodes pacificus and Dermacentor occidentalis (Acari: Ixodidae) for various isolates of Lyme disease spirochetes. J. Med. Entomol. 1994;31:417–424. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/31.3.417. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Lane RS, Fedorova N, Kleinjan JE, Maxwell M. Eco-epidemiological factors contributing to the low risk of human exposure to ixodid tick-borne borreliae in southern California, U.S.A. Ticks Tick Borne Dis. 2013;4:377–385. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2013.02.005. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Lantos PM, Nigrovic LE, Auwaerter PG, Fowler VG, Ruffin F, Brinkerhoff RJ, Reber J, Williams C, Broyhill J, Pan WK, et al. Geographic expansion of Lyme disease in the southeastern United States, 2000–2014. Open Forum Infect. Dis. 2015;2:143. doi: 10.1093/ofid/ofv143. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Lee X, Hardy K, Johnson DH, Paskewitz SM. Hunter-killed deer surveillance to assess changes in the prevalence and distribution of Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) in Wisconsin. J. Med. Entomol. 2013;50:632–639. doi: 10.1603/me12234. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Lingren M, Rowley WA, Thompson C, Gilchrist M. Geographic distribution of ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) in Iowa with emphasis on Ixodes scapularis and their infection with Borrelia burgdorferi. Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2005;5:219–226. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2005.5.219. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Mackay A, Foil L. Seasonal and geographical distribution of adult Ixodes scapularis Say (Acari: Ixodidae) in Louisiana. J. Vector Ecol. 2005;30:168–170. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Mather TN, Nicholson MC, Donnelly EF, Matyas BT. Entomologic index for human risk of Lyme disease. Am. J. Epidemiol. 1996;144:1066–1069. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a008879. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Mays SE, Hendricks BM, Paulsen DJ, Houston AE, Trout-Fryxell RT. Prevalence of five tick-borne bacterial genera in adult Ixodes scapularis removed from white-tailed deer in western Tennessee. Parasites Vectors. 2014;7:473. doi: 10.1186/s13071-014-0473-y. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- McAllister CT, Durden LA, Connior MB, Robison HW. Parasitism of reptiles by the blacklegged tick (Ixodes scapularis) and western blacklegged tick (Ixodes pacificus) with new records of I. scapularis from Arkansas and Oklahoma lizards: implications for Lyme disease epidemiology. Herpetol. Rev. 2013;44:572–579. [Google Scholar]
- Mead PS. Epidemiology of Lyme disease. Infect. Dis. Clin. N. Am. 2015;29:187–210. doi: 10.1016/j.idc.2015.02.010. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Michalski M, Rosenfield C, Erickson M, Selle R, Bates K, Essar D, Massung R. Anaplasma phagocytophilum in central and western Wisconsin: a molecular survey. Parasitol. Res. 2006;99:694–699. doi: 10.1007/s00436-006-0217-9. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Nelson CA, Saha S, Kugeler KJ, Delorey MJ, Shankar MB, Hinckley AF, Mead PS. Incidence of clinician-diganosed Lyme disease, United States, 2005–2010. Emerg. Infect. Dis. 2015;21:1625–1631. doi: 10.3201/eid2109.150417. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Norris D, Klompen J, Black WC., IV Population genetics of Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) based on mitochondrial 16S and 12S genes. J. Med. Entomol. 1996;33:78–89. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/33.1.78. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Onwu CC. Capstone Experience. Western Kentucky University; 2012. The Lyme disase spirochete in tick species collected from Warren County, Kentucky. [Google Scholar]
- Pepin KM, Eisen RJ, Mead PS, Piesman J, Fish D, Hoen AG, Barbour AG, Hamer S, Diuk-Wasser MA. Geographic variation in the relationship between human Lyme disease incidence and density of infected host-seeking Ixodes scapularis nymphs in the eastern United States. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. 2012;86:1062–1071. doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.2012.11-0630. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Piesman J, Eisen L. Prevention of tick-borne diseases. Ann. Rev. Entomol. 2008;53:323–343. doi: 10.1146/annurev.ento.53.103106.093429. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Pinger RR, Glancy T. Ixodes dammini (Acari: Ixodidae) in Indiana. J. Med. Entomol. 1989;26:130–131. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/26.2.130. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Pinger RR, Timmons L, Karris K. Spread of Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) in Indiana: Collections of adults in 1991–1994 and description of a Borrelia burgdorferi-infected population. J. Med. Entomol. 1996;33:852–855. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/33.5.852. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Qiu W-G, Dykhuizen DE, Acosta MS, Luft BJ. Geotraphic uniformity of the Lyme disease spirochete (Borrelia burgdorferi) and its shared history with tick vector (Ixodes scapularis) in the northeastern United States. Genetics. 2002;160:833–849. doi: 10.1093/genetics/160.3.833. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Raizman EA, Holland JD, Shukle JT. White-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) as a potential sentinel for human Lyme disease in Indiana. Zoonoses Public Health. 2012;60:227–233. doi: 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2012.01518.x. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Rand PW, Lacombe EH, Dearborn R, Cahill B, Elias S, Lubelczyk CB, Beckett GA, Smith RP. Passive surveillance in Maine, an area emergent for tick-borne diseases. J. Med. Entomol. 2007;44:1118–1129. doi: 10.1603/0022-2585(2007)44[1118:psimaa]2.0.co;2. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Riehle M, Paskewitz SM. Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae): status and changes in prevalence and distribution in Wisconsin between 1981 and 1994 measured by deer surveillance. J. Med. Entomol. 1996;33:933–938. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/33.6.933. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Robinson SJ, Neitzel DF, Moen RA, Craft ME, Hamilton KE, Johnson LB, Mulla DJ, Munderloh UG, Redig PT, Smith KE, et al. Disease risk in a dynamic environment: the spread of tick-borne pathogens in Minnesota, USA. EcoHealth. 2014;12:152–163. doi: 10.1007/s10393-014-0979-y. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Rodriguez JE, Hamer SA, Castellanos AA, Light JE. Survey of a rodent and tick community in East-Central Texas. Southeast. Nat. 2015;14:415–424. [Google Scholar]
- Rosen ME, Hamer SA, Gerhardt RR, Jones CJ, Muller LI, Scott MC, Hickling GJ. Borrelia burgdorferi not detected in widespread Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) collected from white-tailed deer in Tennessee. J. Med. Entomol. 2012;49:1473–1480. doi: 10.1603/me11255. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Russart NM, Dougherty MW, Vaughn JA. Survey of ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) and tick-borne pathogens in North Dakota. J. Med. Entomol. 2014;51:1087–1090. doi: 10.1603/me14053. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Rydzewski J, Mateus-Pinilla N, Warner RE, Hamer S, Weng H-Y. Ixodes scapularis and Borrelia burgdorferi among diverse habitats within a natural area in East-Central Illinois. Vector Borne and Zoonotic Dis. 2011;11:1351–1358. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2010.0160. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Rydzewski J, Mateus-Pinilla N, Warner RE, Nelson JA, Velat TC. Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) distribution surveys in the Chicago Metropolitan region. J. Med. Entomol. 2012;49:955–959. doi: 10.1603/me11233. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Sakamoto JM, Goddard J, Rasgon JL. Population and demographic strcuture of Ixodes scapularis Say in the Eastern United States. PLoS ONE. 2014;9:e101389. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0101389. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Sanders KD, Guilfoile PG. New records of the blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) in Minnesota. J. Vector Ecol. 2000;25:155–157. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Sanders DM, Schuster AL, McCardle PW, Strey OF, Blankenship TL, Teel PD. Ixodid ticks associated with feral swine in Texas. J. Vector Ecol. 2013;38:361–373. doi: 10.1111/j.1948-7134.2013.12052.x. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Schaar SJ. Masters of Science. Northern Michigan University, MI; 2012. A search for an endemic population of Ixodes scapularis in select areas of Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore. [Google Scholar]
- Serra AC, Warden PS, Fricker CR, Giese AR. Distribution of ticks and prevalence of Borrelia burgdorferi in the upper Connecticut River Valley of Vermont. Northeast. Nat. 2013;20:197–204. doi: 10.1656/045.020.0116. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Smith MP, Ponnusamy L, Jiang J, Ayyash LA, Richards AL, Apperson CS. Bacterial pathogens in Ixodid ticks from a Piedmont County in North Carolina: prevalence of rickettsial organisms. Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis. 2010;10:939–952. doi: 10.1089/vbz.2009.0178. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Snetsinger R. Progress Report. Pennsylvania, PA: The Pennsylvania State University, College of Agriculture, Agricutlure Experiment Station, University Park; 1968. Distribution of ticks and tick-borne diseases in Pennsylvania; pp. 1–8. [Google Scholar]
- Spielman A. The emergence of Lyme disease and human babesiosis in a changing environment. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1994;740:146–156. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1994.tb19865.x. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Spielman A, Wilson ML, Levine JF, Piesman J. Ecology of Ixodes dammini-borne human babesiosis and Lyme disease. Ann. Rev. Entomol. 1985;30:439–460. doi: 10.1146/annurev.en.30.010185.002255. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Stafford KC, Cartter ML, Magnarelli LA, Ertel SH, Mshar PA. Temporal correlations between tick abundance and prevalence of ticks infected with Borrelia burgdorferi and increasing incidence of Lyme disease. J. Clin. Microbiol. 1998;36:1240–1244. doi: 10.1128/jcm.36.5.1240-1244.1998. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Stone BL, Russart NM, Gaultney RA, Floden AM, Vaughn JA, Brissette CA. The western progression of Lyme disease: Infectious and nonclonal Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato populations in Grand Forks County, North Dakota. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 2015;81:48–58. doi: 10.1128/AEM.02422-14. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Strand MR, Walker ED, Merritt RW. Field studies on Ixodes dammini in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Vector Control Bull. North Central States. 1992;1:111–118. [Google Scholar]
- Stromdahl EY, Hickling GJ. Beyond Lyme: Aetiology of tickborne human diseases with emphasis on the south-eastern United States. Zoonoses Public Health. 2012;59:48–64. doi: 10.1111/j.1863-2378.2012.01475.x. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Teglas MB, Foley E. Differences in the transmissibility of two Anaplasma phagocytophilum strains by the North American ticks vector species, Ixodes pacificus and Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) Exp. Appl. Acarol. 2006;38:47–58. doi: 10.1007/s10493-005-5293-5. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Trout RT, Steelman CD. Ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) parasitizing canines and deer in Arkansas. J. Entomol. Sci. 2010;45:140–149. [Google Scholar]
- Van Zee J, Black WC, Levin M, Goddard J, Smith J, Piesman J. High SNP density in the blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis, the principal vector of Lyme disease spirochetes. Ticks Tick Borne Dis. 2013;4:63–71. doi: 10.1016/j.ttbdis.2012.07.005. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Walker ED, Smith TW, DeWitte J, Beaudo DC, McLean RG. Prevalence of Borrelia burgdorferi in host-seeking ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) from a Lyme disease endemic area in northern Michigan. J. Med. Entomol. 1994;31:524–528. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/31.4.524. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Walker ED, Stobierski MG, Poplar ML, Smith TW, Murphy AJ, Smith PC, Schmitt SM, Cooley TM, Kramer CM. Geographic distribution of ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) in Michigan, with emphasis on Ixodes scapularis and Borrelia bugdorferi. J. Med. Entomol. 1998;35:872–882. doi: 10.1093/jmedent/35.5.872. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Wang P, Glowacki MN, Hoet AE, Needham GR, Smith KA, Gary RE, Li X. Emergence of Ixodes scapularis and Borrelia burgdorferi the Lyme disease vector and gent, in Ohio. Front. Cell. Infect. Microbiol. 2014;4:70. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2014.00070. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- Williams DC, Wills W, Durden LA, Gray EW. Ticks of South Carolina. J. Vector Ecol. 1999;24:224–232. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]