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  • Australian paralysis ticks

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Australian paralysis ticks

in
  • Australian paralysis ticks

The Australian Paralysis Tick is found in bush areas down the eastern aspect of the continent. It contains a toxin in its saliva that may cause progressive paralysis in humans by interference with presynaptic transmission in motor nerves. It may also cause severe allergy in some individuals. The female must feed on blood during each of the three stages of the reproductive cycle, and humans can become unintentional hosts. The tick usually feeds for a period of 4-5 days, during which time the accumulation of toxic saliva in the host may result in progressive motor paralysis. Deaths due to tick poisoning are rare, but at least twenty have been recorded in New South Wales this century. Tick paralysis may cause significant losses of livestock and farm animals such as dogs.

Another Australian tick, Ixodes cornuatus, may also cause paralysis.

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Semi-Engorged Tick on Skin

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Publications

Australia's Venomous Wildlife
Ixodes holocyclus, the Man-Biting Tick in S. E. Queensland
Deaths from Tick Paralysis in Human Beings
Tick Paralysis: A Dangerous Disease in Children
A Systematic Study of the Australian Species of the Genus Ixodes (Acarina: Ixodidea)
The Bionomics of Ixodes holocyclus Neumann, with a Redescription of the Adult and Nymphal Stages and a Description of the Larvae