What is a black tick?
There are two types of black ticks: Eastern - ixodes scapularis - and western - ixodes pacificus . Both are more often known as deer ticks, are very similar and are members of the Arachnid family. The black tick is a parasitic organism that feeds on a number of hosts during its two -year life cycle. This small creature, like many other types of ticks, is a conventional carrier or vector of various bacterial infections, including Lyme disease and babesiosis.
The black tick is very common especially in North America and can easily pick it up if the measures are not taken. A member of Arachnid or Spider, family, black tick is a parasite, unlike the spiders to which they are related. The parasite is an organism that uses another organism for food and shelter and to complete the reproductive cycle.
as a parasitic organism, black ticks of feast on the blood of the chosen host and moves to a new guest after each stage of life cycle. After hatching from the large clutch of the eggs, the first phase or larvae finds a tick of a small mammal. One of the most common hosts for larval black ticks is mice with white feet, but every little mammal is enough. Once it is on the host, the tick quite large parts of the mouth below the skin surface and begin to feed on the blood of the mammal.
At this point, larval ticks are most likely to be closed by a bacterium that causes lymph disease and other potentially harmful or fatal bacteria. Ticks can also download and bear other smaller parasites such as unicellular or protozoan, Babesia Microti , which can switch to large mammals such as cattle, horses and people bite from infected ticks. If the larvae checks the infected host, the tick will transfer a smaller parasite or bacteria to maturity, a pot of infections to each host to which they feed on.
Once large enough, the larval tick separates and throws its exOscelet when it transforms into a nymph after a few months. The cycle is then repeated until the nymph has gained enough nutrients from the blood of its host to evolve to an adult. The adult black tick joins a new host that tends to be a much larger mammal, such as a deer, cow or man.
Mature black tick once again borders the mouth of the host's mouth, where it injures a chemical that stores blood and prevents clotting. Feeding for mature female black ticks can take several weeks and include more hosts. Finally, the tick falls from the final host and puts up to 300 eggs on the ground before death and completes its two -year life cycle.