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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ixodes_marxiIxodes marxi - Wikipedia

    Ixodes marxi. Ixodes marxi is a species of tick, commonly known as the squirrel tick. [1] It is a known vector of Powassan virus and can transmit the virus to human beings. [2] These ticks can be found in numerous states of the United States as well as numerous Canadian provinces. Nymphs have been found on vegetation.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ixodes_uriaeIxodes uriae - Wikipedia

    Ixodes uriae, also known as the seabird tick, is a species of parasitic tick known to infest marine birds. [1] [2] It is native to many high latitude areas in the northern and southern hemispheres including Alaska, Canada, Faroe Islands, Iceland, Greenland, England, Scotland, Norway, Finland, the Kola Peninsula, Russia, Patagonia, South Africa ...

  3. Figure 1 : Femelle adulte, nymphe et larve de la tique Ixodes ricinus. Figure 2 : Collecte de tiques en quête d’un hôte par la méthode du drap. Figure 3 : Carte de répartition d’Ixodes ricinus d’après l’ECDC au 20 mai 2020. Figure 4 : Carte de répartition d’Ixodes ricinus d’après les données issues de la littérature ...

  4. I. cornuatus. Binomial name. Ixodes cornuatus. Roberts, 1960. Ixodes cornuatus, commonly known as the Tasmanian paralysis tick, is one of about 75 species of Australian tick fauna. It is found across Tasmania and Victoria. It has been responsible for several cases of envenomation in humans and the death of one cat. [1]

  5. Ixodes microgalei is a species of Ixodes that was discovered in the humid eastern forests of the Antananarivo Province in Madagascar. [1] Females of this species parasitize various species of shrew tenrecs of the genus Microgale (Afrosoricida: Tenrecidae, Oryzorictinae). All members of the genus Microgale, as well as of the larger subfamily to ...

  6. Ixodes neuquenensis. Ixodes neuquenensis is a species of tick that lives on the monito del monte ( Dromiciops gliroides ), a nocturnal marsupial that lives in the temperate forests of southern South America. [1] [2] Due to the near-threatened status of its host, Ixodes neuquenensis is also at risk.

  7. Ixodes hoogstraali is a species of tick endemic to the higher mountains of southwestern Arabia. The type specimens were collected at 7,400 feet (2,300 m) elevation near Ma'bar, Yemen, on king jirds ( Meriones rex buryi Thomas), trapped beside a well in dry fields on a rocky plateau. [2]

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