| Literature DB >> 34959496 |
Carlos A López González1, Norma Hernández-Camacho1, Gabriela Aguilar-Tipacamú2, Salvador Zamora-Ledesma1, Andrea M Olvera-Ramírez2, Robert W Jones1.
Abstract
Mexico is a highly diverse country where ticks and tick-borne diseases (TBD) directly impact the health of humans and domestic and wild animals. Ticks of the genera Rhipicephalus spp., Amblyomma spp., and Ixodes spp. represent the most important species in terms of host parasitism and geographical distribution in the country, although information on other genera is either limited or null. In addition, information regarding the influence of global warming on the increase in tick populations is scarce or nonexistent, despite climate conditions being the most important factors that determine tick distribution. In order to aid in the management of ticks and the risks of TBD in humans and domestic animals in Mexico, an analysis was conducted of the gaps in information on ticks with the purpose of updating the available knowledge of these ectoparasites and adapting the existing diagnostic tools for potential distribution analysis of TBD in wildlife. These tools will help to determine the epidemiological role of wildlife in the human-domestic animal interface in anthropized environments in Mexico.Entities:
Keywords: Mexico; gap analysis; tick borne diseases; ticks; wildlife; zoonotic
Year: 2021 PMID: 34959496 PMCID: PMC8708601 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens10121541
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Tick species richness by state in Mexico (map created using the program ArcMap 10.3 and records from [9]).
Figure 2Tick genera associated with agriculture, livestock, and forestry land use throughout Mexico (map created using the program ArcMap 10.3 and records from [10]).
Figure 3Tick genus distribution percentages (%) for the types of vegetation in Mexico (graph created using the program Microsoft Excel 365 and records from [10]).
Figure 4Distribution of tick genera in accordance with types of vegetation (map created using the program ArcMap 10.3 and records from [12]).
Tick-borne pathogens surveyed by molecular techniques in Mexican wildlife.
| Pathogen | Pathogen Frequency (%) | Type of Sample | Ticks | Stage | Molecular Detection Technique | Host | State | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40/94 (42.5) | Bladder/ear | - | - | PCR | House mouse ( | Yucatan | [ | |
| 5/29 (17.5) | Bladder/ear | - | - | PCR | Rats | |||
| 48/54 (88.9) | Serum /blood | - | - | PCR | Mexican deer mouse ( | Querétaro | [ | |
|
| 6/54 (11.1) | Serum /blood | - | Rat ( | ||||
| 11/22 (9) | Blood | - | - | TickPath Layerplex qPCR | Coyote | Texas (USA-Mexico border) | [ | |
| 1/122 (0.8) | Blood | - | - | TickPath Layerplex qPCR | White-tailed deer ( | |||
| 5/25 (20) | Spleen/liver | - | White-tailed deer ( | [ | ||||
| 2/4 (50) | TickPath Layerplex qPCR, nested PCR | Mazama deer ( | Yucatan | |||||
|
| 8/25 (29) | - |
| - | Eastern cottontail | Nuevo Léon | [ | |
|
| 1/1 (100) | - |
| PCR | Jaguar ( | Tamaulipas | ||
|
| 1/6 (0.16) | - |
| Painted spiny pocket mice ( | Nuevo León | |||
|
| 3/60 (5) | - | PCR | Bobcoat ( | Tamaulipas | [ | ||
|
| 1/37 (2.7) | - |
| Adults | PCR | Rabbits ( | Hidalgo | [ |
|
| 10/23 (43.5) | Spleen | - | - | PCR | Rodents | Yucatan | [ |
| 2/16 (12.5) | - | Adults | PCR | Coyote ( | Chihuahua | [ | ||
| 1/5 (20) | - | Kit fox ( | ||||||
|
| 6/22 (27.3) | - |
| Adults | PCR | Owned ad Free roaming dogs ( | Veracruz | [ |
| Tick pool |
| Massive sequencing | Bolson tortoise | Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango | [ | |||
| 3/16 (19.7) | - |
| Nymphs | PCR | Common boa ( | Veracruz | [ | |
|
| 1/9 (11.1) | - |
| Adults | Green iguana ( | |||
|
| 2/15 (13.3) | - |
| Larvae | Marine toad | Guerrero | ||
|
| 3/25 (12) | - |
| Larvae | Marine toad | Tabasco | ||
| 5/60 (8.3) | - |
| Adults | PCR | Mesoamerican canean toad ( | Veracruz | [ |