Overview
Brief Summary
Brief Summary
Most of the several dozen hard ticks in the genus Dermacentor have a 3-host life cycle. Dermacentor ticks are found on all continents except Australia and Antarctica. In Eurasia, D. marginalis and D. reticulatus are well known as ectoparasites of livestock and other domestic animals, whereas in North America D. variabilis and D. andersoni parasitize livestock and dogs and may sometimes feed on humans as well. Dermacentor ticks are not significant pests of livestock in Africa. Dermacentor reticulatus is a vector for Rickettsia sibirica, which causes Siberian tick typhus in the former Soviet Union. Dermacentor variabilis and D. andersoni are vectors for Rickettsia rickettsia bacteria, which cause Rocky Mountain spotted fever, a life-threatening but treatable disease that is endemic to much of the United States and beyond, as well as tularemia (caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis); these ticks are not known to transmit Lyme disease. (Jongejan and Uilenberg 2004; U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention Tick Website)
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Molecular Biology and Genetics
Barcode
Locations of barcode samples
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Statistics of barcoding coverage
| Specimen Records: | 22 |
| Specimens with Sequences: | 14 |
| Specimens with Barcodes: | 14 |
| Public Records: | 0 |
| Species: | 7 |
| Species With Barcodes: | 6 |
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Wikipedia
Dermacentor
Dermacentor is a genus of hard-bodied ticks.[1]
Species
- Dermacentor abaensis Teng, 1963
- Dermacentor albipictus Packard, 1869
- Dermacentor andersoni Stiles 1908
- Dermacentor asper Arthur, 1960
- Dermacentor atrosignatus Neumann, 1906
- Dermacentor auratus Supino, 1897
- Dermacentor circumguttatus Neumann, 1897
- Dermacentor compactus Neumann, 1901
- Dermacentor dispar Cooley, 1937
- Dermacentor dissimilis Cooley 1947
- Dermacentor everestianus Hirst, 1926
- Dermacentor halli McIntosh, 1931
- Dermacentor hunteri Bishopp, 1912
- Dermacentor imitans Warburton 1933
- Dermacentor latus Cooley, 1937
- Dermacentor marginatus Sulzer, 1776
- Dermacentor montanus Filippova & Panova 1974
- Dermacentor near reticulatus Schille, 1916
- Dermacentor nitens Neumann, 1897
- Dermacentor niveus Neumann 1897
- Dermacentor nuttalli Olenev, 1928
- Dermacentor occidentalis Marx, 1892
- Dermacentor parumapertus Neumann, 1901
- Dermacentor pavlovskyi Olenev 1927
- Dermacentor pomerantzevi Serdyukova, 1951
- Dermacentor raskemensis Pomerantsev, 1946
- Dermacentor reticulatus Fabricius, 1794
- Dermacentor rhinocerinus Denny, 1843
- Dermacentor silvarum Olenev 1931
- Dermacentor sinicus Schulze, 1932
- Dermacentor steini Schulze, 1933
- Dermacentor taiwanensis Sugimoto, 1935
- Dermacentor ushakovae Filippova & Panova 1987
- Dermacentor variabilis Say, 1821
References
- ^ Dergousoff SJ, Chilton NB (2007). "Differentiation of three species of ixodid tick, Dermacentor andersoni, D. variabilis and D. albipictus, by PCR-based approaches using markers in ribosomal DNA". Mol. Cell. Probes 21 (5-6): 343–8. doi:10.1016/j.mcp.2007.04.003. PMID 17544620. http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0890-8508(07)00032-1.
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