Preliminary study on the seasonal questing of Ixodes ricinus group ticks in Ain Draham forest (north-western Tunisia) with analyses of their phylogenetic diversity
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Khawla Elati, Médiha Khammasi Khbou, Olaf Kahl, Joram Mwacharo, Khaled Al-Shamaa, Mourad Rekik, Mohamed Aziz Darghouth, Mohamed Gharbi. (23/9/2022). Preliminary study on the seasonal questing of Ixodes ricinus group ticks in Ain Draham forest (north-western Tunisia) with analyses of their phylogenetic diversity. Veterinary Parasitology: Regional Studies and Reports, 36.
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Abstract/Description
The present study aimed to investigate the activity dynamics of Ixodes ricinus group ticks in a forest located in north-western Tunisia (Aïn Draham, Jendouba District) and assess the variation of abiotic factors (temperature, Normalized Difference Vegetation Index and relative humidity) during one year survey from September 2016 to August 2017 using the dragging sampling method. A total of 116 questing ticks was collected from the vegetation consisting of 47 adults (19 females and 28 males, sex ratio M:F = 1.47), 45 nymphs and 24 larvae representing 40.5, 38.8 and 20.7% of the total collected specimens, respectively. Adult I. ricinus were collected during October–May, nymphs during May–August and larvae during July–September. There were statistically significant correlations between adult tick numbers and mean daily relative humidity (Pearson r = 0.77; p = 0.003) and mean daily temperature (r = −0.74; p = 0.006).
The comparison of 16S rDNA sequences from 20 adult ticks of approximately 444 bp length showed variability among 11 sequences. There was a low genetic variability (<1%) among the I. ricinus isolates collected from the forest. The amplicons showed >99% identity with I. ricinus and Ixodes inopinatus sequences from different countries and published in GenBank. These results should be complemented by further surveys in other Tunisian regions to better understand the influence of environmental factors on the biology of I. ricinus and the occurrence of sympatric I. inopinatus ticks. Different molecular markers should be used for better understanding of their taxonomic status.
Author ORCID identifiers
Al-Shamaa, Khaled https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7668-3798
Rekik, Mourad https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7455-2017
Mohamed Aziz Darghouth https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1730-7431
Mohamed Gharbi https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7074-2021