![]() deer tick (photo from the US Agricultural Research Service) |
from a news article by Michigan Public Radio
Michigan is home to more than 20 species of ticks, but the cold winter probably won't reduce the upcoming summer supply. Jean Tsao is an associate professor of fisheries and wildlife at Michigan State University. She studies ticks.
Tsao says there is plenty of leaf litter, and the heavy snow also insulates the ticks.
Black-legged ticks (deer ticks) are usually the first to emerge. Expect them around mid-March. The moisture level actually affects tick populations more than a cold winter. If the warmer months are dry, ticks tend to hunker down in the litter to stay moist.
A new problem is that the Lone Star tick was identified in Kalamazoo County in 2022. Bites from this tick can trigger a condition that makes the victim allergic to red meat. It appears they are spreading to other parts of the state.
There has been one recorded death from this tick-caused allergy, a man in New Jersey in 2024. Known as alpha-gal syndrome, it causes abdominal distress, hives, or anaphylactic shock. The syndrome produces a reaction to the alpha-gal sugar naturally occurring in mammalian meat.
See Alpha-gal syndrome at Allergy and Asthma Network
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