1. Impacts of Timber Harvest on Communities of Small Mammals, Ticks, and Tick-Borne Pathogens in a High-Risk Landscape in Northern California.
- Author
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López-Pérez AM, Plourde B, Smith K, Rubino F, Pascoe E, Smith O, and Foley J
- Subjects
- Anaplasma phagocytophilum isolation & purification, Animals, Borrelia burgdorferi isolation & purification, California epidemiology, Forests, Population Dynamics, Prevalence, Risk Assessment, Tick Infestations epidemiology, Tick Infestations parasitology, Tick-Borne Diseases epidemiology, Tick-Borne Diseases microbiology, Tick-Borne Diseases parasitology, Biodiversity, Forestry, Ixodidae microbiology, Ixodidae parasitology, Ixodidae physiology, Rodentia physiology, Tick Infestations veterinary, Tick-Borne Diseases veterinary
- Abstract
Timber harvest may impact tick-borne disease by affecting small mammal and tick community structures. We assessed tick and small mammal populations in older second-growth redwood (Sequoia sempervirens (D. Don) Endl) habitat at two harvested sites in Santa Cruz County, California, where local risk of tick-borne disease is high and determined the prevalence of tick-borne pathogens in ticks. After single-tree removal harvest in 2014, there was a modest reduction in canopy, primarily toward the end of the study. Harvested sites showed strong reductions in California mouse (Peromyscus californicus, (Gambel)) captures 2-yr after harvest, resolving such that treatments and controls were comparable by the end of the study. Following harvest, treated sites experienced a transient decreased tick infestation while control plots experienced an increase. Ixodes angustus (Neumann) infestation probability on harvested plots decreased immediately after harvest, increasing with time but remaining lower than control plots, whereas I. pacificus (Cooley and Kohls) prevalence was higher shortly after the harvest on harvested plots, and continued to increase. Mean abundance of ticks on vegetation increased on control plots. We detected Borrelia burgdorferi ((Johnson et al.) Baranton) and Anaplasma phagocytophilum ((Foggie 1949) Dumler) in 3.8 and 3.1% of ticks on rodents, but no differences were associated with harvest. Impacts of forest harvest on tick-borne disease depend on removal practice and intensity, whether or not hosts are habitat specialists, and whether or not ticks are host specialists., (© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America.All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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