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Genetic variation in the 16s mitochondrial rDNA gene from Texas and Oklahoma populations of Amblyomma maculatumLostak, Tracy Karon 15 May 2009 (has links)
Single-strand conformation polymorphism was used to detect different
haplotypes of the 16S mitochondrial rDNA gene within samples of Gulf Coast ticks,
Amblyomma maculatum Koch, collected from Payne County, Oklahoma and Brazos and
Refugio Counties, Texas. Ticks were collected from dogs, horses, and cattle. The
haplotype frequencies from the cattle collections were compared to a similar study,
conducted in 1999, to detect if any changes in frequencies had occurred. There were
significant differences (p<0.05) between the haplotype frequencies from 1999 and 2007.
The haplotype designated as D was highly prevalent in all sampled populations, however
was not detected in Oklahoma and Texas eight years earlier. Possible explanations for
this occurrence include ticks with this haplotype having a higher fecundity, resistance to
drought, or resistance to acaricides. Comparisons of the haplotypes of ticks collected
from cattle solely in 2007 showed that the haplotype frequencies of Brazos County and
Payne County are more similar than to Refugio County. The haplotype frequencies
found on various hosts were also compared and no significant differences were found
(p>0.05).
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Interaction of Gulf Coast tick, Amblyomma maculatum Koch, nymphs on cattleWexler, Aaron 30 October 2006 (has links)
Concern over the vector potential of the Gulf Coast tick, Amblyomma maculatum
Koch, with the pathogen Ehrlichia ruminantium Dumler, causative agent of the disease
heartwater, has increased the need for fundamental knowledge of tick ecology and
behavior, specifically immature tick biology. Texas strain A. maculatum adult male ticks,
known to emit attraction-aggregation-attachment pheromone (AAAP), were used to
artificially simulate immature tick interaction with adults, in forced environments, on
cattle. Artificial areas were grouped by treatment level, which were 1) aggregating,
attached adult males, 2) aggregating attached adult females or 3) an empty area with no
adults, as a control. Immature ticks were noted to be 6 times more likely to be
aggregating in the AAAP treatment area when adult males were present. In the presences
of either adult female ticks or no ticks at all, immature ticks were found to be attaching at
random within the given area were they where permitted to feed. A second correlation of
mortality was noted among immature ticks in the presence of AAAP emitting adult male
ticks. In the permitted area where immature ticks could attach and feed, immature ticks
were twice as likely to have survived to engorgement if adult male ticks were present in
the area as well (53%). There was no difference in the survival rate among immature
ticks if adult females were present or no adults at all, 26% and 21%, respectively. The study demonstrated that a significant attraction existed between immature ticks and
attached adult males emitting AAAP.
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Terrestrial Habitat Use by Radio-Implanted Spotted Salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum)Nussbaum, Ashley Lynn January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Meteorological Factors Regulating the Population Expansion and Contraction of Amblyomma maculatum (Acari: Ixodidae) in TexasCoburn, Jordan McQuade 2009 August 1900 (has links)
The interaction of tick species and the microclimate that they inhabit is a subject that is frequently studied. The known biology of the Gulf Coast tick, Amblyomma maculatum Koch (Acari: Ixodidae), was used to conduct analyses to determine which meteorological factors regulate Gulf Coast tick survivorship in an area of Texas that is known for reduced occurrence of this tick species.
Gulf Coast tick collection records, that indicated the collection of a single tick or multiple ticks from one animal or multiple animals at livestock markets, were obtained from the Texas Animal Health Commission. These records were used as an indicator of adult Gulf Coast tick abundance during each year in the 90 county study area and were used as the dependent variable in linear, quadratic, and cubic regression analyses. Independent variables used in these analyses were precipitation and differing drought thresholds during the peak activity time of the four life stages of the Gulf Coast tick and during combined life stage peak activity times.
Linear, quadratic, and cubic regression analyses to measure the effect of precipitation during differing peak activity times of the Gulf Coast tick on adult Gulf Coast tick collection records were not statistically significant. These three regression analyses were also used to measure the effect of increasing drought thresholds, measured using a Keetch-Byram Drought Index, on adult Gulf Coast tick collection records. A determination was made that increasing drought thresholds during the peak activity time of differing Gulf Coast tick life stages reduce the number of Gulf Coast tick collection records the following year.
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Potential application of a Gulf Coast Tick, Amblyomma maculatum Koch, Aggregation-Attachment-Pheromone for surveillance of free-living adultsKim, Hee Jung 17 February 2005 (has links)
The aggregation-attachment-pheromone (AAP) of two geographic strains of the
Gulf Coast tick, Amblyomma maculatum Koch, was investigated to evaluate practicality
of using solid-phase-microextraction (SPME) in an AAP study of Gulf Coast tick.
Solid-phase microextraction was used to compare the AAP production in two strains of
fed male Gulf Coast tick and demonstrate and confirm the presence of AAP in bioassays.
A solid-phase-microextraction (SPME) headspace collection technique was
sufficient to capture volatile organic compounds produced by fed and unfed male Gulf
Coast ticks. Gas chromatography analysis revealed three major volatile organic
compounds were produced in significantly greater amounts (p < 0.05) by fed males than
those produced by unfed males. These volatile compounds were produced in
significantly higher amount by the third day of feeding by male ticks. However, two of
these volatiles remained relatively constant in their production while the primary volatile
compound increased in its production until the eighth day of feeding by male Gulf Coast
ticks. Also, the relative abundances of these three volatile organic compounds were
different between Oklahoma and Texas strains of Gulf Coast ticks.
The activity of AAP from fed male Gulf Coast ticks was confirmed using two
bioassay techniques. A petri dish bioassay revealed significantly higher numbers of
female Gulf Coast ticks attracted to fed-males which also produced significantly greater
amounts (p < 0.001) of volatile organic compounds detected by GC analysis. The Ytube
olfactometer bioassay revealed that significantly higher numbers of females
responded to fed-males or to CO2 when compared to purified air (p < 0.001), but the
differences in female response to fed-males and CO2 were not significant (p < 0.391 in
Oklahoma strain and p < 0.458 in Texas strain). However, female responses to stimuli
containing both fed-males and CO2 were significantly higher when compared to either
stimulus alone (p < 0.001).
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Population Size and Movements of Spotted Salamanders at South Holston Dam, Sullivan County, Tennessee.Smith, Eric Alexander 01 May 2004 (has links) (PDF)
In the Southern Appalachians, there are growing concerns about Spotted Salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) due to habitat destruction and the uncertain future of their forested riparian habitat. In this study, I establish baseline data of a population of Spotted Salamanders so future monitoring of this population can be performed. The study site is located in northeastern Tennessee, just east of the city of Bristol. It is a vernal pond at the Osceola Island Recreation Area one mile below the South Holston Dam on Holston View Dam road. A drift fence was established completely around the perimeter of the vernal pond to capture Spotted Salamanders entering and exiting the study pond. Individual Spotted Salamanders were identified using spot pattern recognition. An estimated population size of 2,449 Spotted Salamanders was determined to utilized the pond for breeding for the spring of 2003.
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Persistence of the Larval Environment on Post-Metamorphic Performance and Population Dynamics in AmphibiansCharbonnier, Julie 01 January 2017 (has links)
Organisms with complex life cycles may experience diverse stressors during their development. Stressors experienced in early life stages may influence the quantity and quality of individuals in later life stages. However, it is unclear if these effects persist later in life and how they may influence population dynamics. This dissertation uses two amphibian species, the Western spadefoot toad (Pelobates cultripes) and the spotted salamander (Ambystoma maculatum) to explore how biotic and abiotic factors experienced in aquatic and terrestrial environments influence phenotype and survival. We use a combination of field mesoscosm studies, laboratory studies and modeling to explore how early life history stressors persist in diverse environmental contexts. In Chapter 1, pond drying and larval density negatively influence multiple aspects of phenotype in the Western spadefoot toad. In Chapter 2, reduced body size due to larval stressors persisted in the first year of life in spotted salamanders in both high and low terrestrial resource environments. Additionally, there was no relationship between size at metamorphosis and post-metamorphic terrestrial survival. In Chapter 3, low terrestrial moisture levels reduced post-metamorphic growth rates by reducing food intake in juvenile spotted salamanders from both high and low larval density treatments. In Chapter 4, we scale up the effects of reduced body size in the Western spadefoot toad to explore how reduced body size due to pond drying may influence population densities using a stage specific matrix model. Reduced body size, by delaying maturity, may reduce adult densities in the Western spadefoot toad. This dissertation suggests that life stages are highly interconnected, as stressors experienced early in life stage may persist through their effects on phenotype in the absence of compensatory mechanisms. Variation in later life stages may also influence phenotype, but may not completely erase effects of early environments. Stressors experienced early in life may also translate to population level consequences, especially when organisms experience multiple stressors across life stages.
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High Prevalence of "Candidatus Rickettsia andeanae" and Apparent Exclusion of Rickettsia Parkeri in Adult Amblyomma Maculatum (Acari: Ixodidae) From Kansas and OklahomaPaddock, Christopher D., Denison, Amy M., Dryden, Michael W., Noden, Bruce H., Lash, R. Ryan, Abdelghani, Sarah S., Evans, Anna E., Kelly, Aubree R., Hecht, Joy A., Karpathy, Sandor E., Ganta, Roman R., Little, Susan E. 01 January 2015 (has links)
Amblyomma maculatum (the Gulf Coast tick), an aggressive, human-biting, Nearctic and Neotropical tick, is the principal vector of Rickettsia parkeri in the United States. This pathogenic spotted fever group Rickettsia species has been identified in 8-52% of questing adult Gulf Coast ticks in the southeastern United States. To our knowledge, R. parkeri has not been reported previously from adult specimens of A. maculatum collected in Kansas or Oklahoma. A total of 216 adult A. maculatum ticks were collected from 18 counties in Kansas and Oklahoma during 2011-2014 and evaluated by molecular methods for evidence of infection with R. parkeri. No infections with this agent were identified; however, 47% of 94 ticks collected from Kansas and 73% of 122 ticks from Oklahoma were infected with ". Candidatus Rickettsia andeanae" a spotted fever group Rickettsia species of undetermined pathogenicity. These preliminary data suggest that " Ca. R. andeanae" is well-adapted to survival in populations of A. maculatum in Kansas and Oklahoma, and that its ubiquity in Gulf Coast ticks in these states may effectively exclude R. parkeri from their shared arthropod host, which could diminish markedly or preclude entirely the occurrence of R. parkeri rickettsiosis in this region of the United States.
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Methylmercury Bioaccumulation in Spotted Salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum) in Southern OhioWalker, Rachel Alex 06 June 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Systematics and population structure of Amblyomma maculatum group ticks and Rickettsia parkeri, an emerging human pathogen in southern Arizona, USAE Allerdice, Michelle E.J. 10 December 2021 (has links)
The recent discovery of Amblyomma maculatum sensu lato (s. l.) ticks in southern Arizona has renewed discussions around species designations for members of the Amblyomma maculatum tick group. Amblyomma maculatum s. l. from Arizona appear to be morphologically intermediate between A. maculatum sensu stricto (s. s.) and A. triste s. s. At present there is no conclusive species designation for the ticks from Arizona. My research focused on analyzing the systematics of both A. maculatum s. l. and Rickettsia parkeri, a common bacterial pathogen transmitted by these ticks.
In the laboratory, A. maculatum s. l. from Arizona and A. maculatum s. s. from Georgia readily mated on experimental animals to produce F1 hybrid ticks; there was no difference in fertility with these two populations when compared with homologous populations. However, the F1 hybrids produced during these experiments exhibited diminished fitness and did not produce a viable F2 generation. These results suggest that A. maculatum s. l. and A. maculatum s. s. represent separate biological species.
Results of the crossbreeding experiment conflict with recent genetic analyses of A. maculatum s. l. and A. maculatum s. s. suggesting they are a single species. Thus, I developed and optimized 14 microsatellite loci that amplify both A. maculatum s. s. and A. maculatum s. l. These novel microsatellite markers can be used in future analyses of A. maculatum s. l. and A. maculatum s. s. to further test for conspecificity between the two.
I also investigated the genetic relationships within geographically distinct R. parkeri strains through development and implementation of a multi-locus sequence typing analysis. I showed that while there is no consistent genetic delineation of strains isolated from A. maculatum s. l. versus A. maculatum s. s., there is a subset of R. parkeri strains from A. maculatum s. l. that appear to represent an intermediate genotype between the North and South American strains. While the biological causes for these results are not immediately clear, coevolution of R. parkeri and A. maculatum s. l. may account for the detection of the intermediate genotype only found in association with A. maculatum s. l.
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