'Your fear is well-founded': How human activities have raised the risk of tick-borne diseases like Lyme

Changes to forests, and how close people and their livestock live to them, have changed tick habitats and the risks humans face of Lyme disease and other illnesses.

a close-up of a tick on a stick
The black-legged tick, or deer tick, Ixodes scapularis, can transmit Lyme disease and other health hazards.

When you think about ticks, you might picture nightmarish little parasites, stalking you on weekend hikes or afternoons in the park.

Your fear is well-founded. Tick-borne diseases are the most prevalent vector-borne diseases — those transmitted by living organisms — in the United States. Each tick feeds on multiple animals throughout its life, absorbing viruses and bacteria along the way and passing them on with its next bite. Some of those viruses and bacteria are harmful to humans, causing diseases that can be debilitating and sometimes lethal without treatment, such as Lyme, babesiosis and Rocky Mountain spotted fever.

Sean Lawrence
Assistant Professor of History, West Virginia University

Sean Lawrence is a historian of environmental history and modern Germany with research interests in empire, ecology, rural environments, and political economy.

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