Table 1.
Variable | Std. error | df | t-value | P |
---|---|---|---|---|
Forest habitat | 0.701 | 194.61 | 4.171 | <0.0001*** |
Lawn habitat | 0.62 | 130.728 | 0.346 | 0.73 |
Shrub/garden habitat | 0.633 | 144.084 | 0.362 | 0.718 |
Outside cat present | 0.713 | 357.989 | 0.158 | 0.874 |
Wood pile present | 0.51 | 357.998 | −0.894 | 0.372 |
Trash present | 0.521 | 327.604 | 2.678 | 0.008** |
Stone wall present | 0.618 | 318.401 | 2.237 | 0.026* |
Barrier present | 2.244 | 352.022 | 0.132 | 0.895 |
Bird feeder present | 0.521 | 292.162 | −0.094 | 0.926 |
Fencing present | 0.802 | 334.047 | −0.913 | 0.362 |
No. of forest flagging intervals | 0.065 | 243.325 | −1.644 | 0.102 |
Fraction of flagging intervals with barberry | 5.612 | 344.418 | 0.57 | 0.569 |
Summary of results from linear mixed model including fixed effects of property management variables, habitat, and forest area (as measured by the number of forest flagging intervals), and random effects of neighborhood and property address. Fencing is considered present if at least 75% of the property is fenced, and absent if less than 75% of the property is fenced. Trash and stone walls were each associated with increased tick abundance. Forest samples had increased tick abundance. Asterisks indicate significance: * (P < 0.05), ** (P < 0.01), *** (P < 0.001).