Tick attack: BBC hunts for tiny bloodsuckers as diseases rise

by | Jun 8, 2024 | Health

5 hours agoBBC/Emma LynchAm I the hunter or the hunted?It’s the question running through my mind as I stroll through the long grass and bracken.I’ve come to the park looking for blood-sucking ticks – to find out how common they are, why new species and new tick-borne diseases are coming to the UK and to discover how worried we should be.But I’m keenly aware I’m also dinner for hungry parasites and that the blood pulsing through my legs is a gourmet meal for a tick that hasn’t tasted warm blood since before winter. So, hunter or hunted?”I think you’re probably a bit of both,” says Prof Sally Cutler, medical microbiologist at the University of East London, who is going to teach me how to find the tiny parasites.I’ve tucked my trousers into my socks.Tick-hunting gear is surprisingly rustic. Prof Cutler hands me a blanket with a wooden pole sewn into the top and attached to a piece of string.The species we’re looking for, the castor bean tick or Ixodes ricinus, climbs to the top of a blade of grass or other vegetation where it plays the waiting game.BBC/Emma LynchThe blanket deceives the ticks into believing a furry animal has just walked by so they jump on board.We’ve gone only 30 paces into our walk in Richmond Park, south-west London, before Prof Cutler says it’s time to flip over the blanket.There, in the corner, are a trio of ticks.I’m shocked at how little effort it took to find them and by how small they are. You could fit dozens of them on a fingernail.These are nymphs, the second stage in the tick’s life cycle. Ticks hatch as six-legged larvae and gorge themselves so much on their first blood-meal they sprout an extra pair of legs (and I thought I was stuffed after a Christmas dinner), becoming nymphs.The nymphs we found are already able to spread disease, and because they are so small they are easy to miss. In the dense thicket of my hairy legs, I doubt I would notice if one had latched on. “We can still see where we parked the car, but it just shows that even in verges, in your back garden, all kinds of areas, you could have ticks,” says Prof Cutler.”Here we are in the middle of London, but ticks are going to be pretty well anywhere in the UK,” she says. They are most commonly found in grassy and wooden areas.BBC/Emma LynchProf Cutler bottles up the nymphs and we go hunting again. We spend half an hour floating the blanket across the vegetation adding dozens of ticks to our collection, including nymphs and the more elusive adult males and females. I’d anticipated this hunt being a fruitless exercise, not that we’d be leaving with vial after vial after vial of ticks. They are remarkably easy to find here. BBC/Emma LynchMilder winters caused by climate change is thought to be making tick season start earlier and last longer as well as making it possible for new species to survive in the UK. So are ticks something we are all going to have to get used to? “The numbers do appear to be increasing,” Prof Cutler says. “We’re seeing different types of ticks that have been establishing in the UK so it all points towards that.”Dangerous diseasesIf all ticks did was bite they would just be a nuisance. But like mosquitoes they spread disease when they plunge their mouths into our skin to drink blood. The most well-known is Lyme disease. About 4% …

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[mwai_chat context=”Let’s have a discussion about this article:nn5 hours agoBBC/Emma LynchAm I the hunter or the hunted?It’s the question running through my mind as I stroll through the long grass and bracken.I’ve come to the park looking for blood-sucking ticks – to find out how common they are, why new species and new tick-borne diseases are coming to the UK and to discover how worried we should be.But I’m keenly aware I’m also dinner for hungry parasites and that the blood pulsing through my legs is a gourmet meal for a tick that hasn’t tasted warm blood since before winter. So, hunter or hunted?”I think you’re probably a bit of both,” says Prof Sally Cutler, medical microbiologist at the University of East London, who is going to teach me how to find the tiny parasites.I’ve tucked my trousers into my socks.Tick-hunting gear is surprisingly rustic. Prof Cutler hands me a blanket with a wooden pole sewn into the top and attached to a piece of string.The species we’re looking for, the castor bean tick or Ixodes ricinus, climbs to the top of a blade of grass or other vegetation where it plays the waiting game.BBC/Emma LynchThe blanket deceives the ticks into believing a furry animal has just walked by so they jump on board.We’ve gone only 30 paces into our walk in Richmond Park, south-west London, before Prof Cutler says it’s time to flip over the blanket.There, in the corner, are a trio of ticks.I’m shocked at how little effort it took to find them and by how small they are. You could fit dozens of them on a fingernail.These are nymphs, the second stage in the tick’s life cycle. Ticks hatch as six-legged larvae and gorge themselves so much on their first blood-meal they sprout an extra pair of legs (and I thought I was stuffed after a Christmas dinner), becoming nymphs.The nymphs we found are already able to spread disease, and because they are so small they are easy to miss. In the dense thicket of my hairy legs, I doubt I would notice if one had latched on. “We can still see where we parked the car, but it just shows that even in verges, in your back garden, all kinds of areas, you could have ticks,” says Prof Cutler.”Here we are in the middle of London, but ticks are going to be pretty well anywhere in the UK,” she says. They are most commonly found in grassy and wooden areas.BBC/Emma LynchProf Cutler bottles up the nymphs and we go hunting again. We spend half an hour floating the blanket across the vegetation adding dozens of ticks to our collection, including nymphs and the more elusive adult males and females. I’d anticipated this hunt being a fruitless exercise, not that we’d be leaving with vial after vial after vial of ticks. They are remarkably easy to find here. BBC/Emma LynchMilder winters caused by climate change is thought to be making tick season start earlier and last longer as well as making it possible for new species to survive in the UK. So are ticks something we are all going to have to get used to? “The numbers do appear to be increasing,” Prof Cutler says. “We’re seeing different types of ticks that have been establishing in the UK so it all points towards that.”Dangerous diseasesIf all ticks did was bite they would just be a nuisance. But like mosquitoes they spread disease when they plunge their mouths into our skin to drink blood. The most well-known is Lyme disease. About 4% …nnDiscussion:nn” ai_name=”RocketNews AI: ” start_sentence=”Can I tell you more about this article?” text_input_placeholder=”Type ‘Yes'”]
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