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  • Benji Jones: In the summer of 2019,

  • a bull was found dead on a farm in North Carolina.

  • Dead by exsanguination.

  • Which means it was drained of blood.

  • The culprit wasn't real-life vampires,

  • but something just as frightening:

  • an army of more than 1,000 Asian longhorned ticks.

  • But here's the thing.

  • As scary as that sounds,

  • Asian longhorns are just one

  • of about 90 tick species found in the US.

  • All of them suck blood, all of them can carry disease,

  • and all of them are incredibly difficult to kill.

  • The Asian longhorned tick is truly a villainous pest.

  • Not only is it an invasive species,

  • but it can also clone itself over and over again.

  • Since it was first reported in 2017,

  • it's crawled its way to at least 12 other states.

  • Including where we are here, New York.

  • Danielle Tufts: OK, so this is an adult.

  • This looks like the Asian longhorned tick to me.

  • Jones: So this the infamous

  • Asian longhorn tick? Tufts: Yep.

  • Jones: That's Danielle Tufts,

  • a disease ecologist at Columbia University.

  • She's studying ticks in Staten Island

  • to figure out what diseases they carry.

  • But first, she has to collect them.

  • Tufts: So, this is what we call a drag cloth,

  • and it's a meter by meter, so a meter squared.

  • And basically what we would do

  • is we just walk at a nice, even, slow pace

  • and drag this right behind us.

  • And we'll stop every about 20 meters or so,

  • and we'll flip the cloth over,

  • and we'll look for whatever ticks are on the backside.

  • Jones: Contrary to what many people believe,

  • ticks don't actively seek you out.

  • Tufts: Ah, so here's a tick right here.

  • Jones: Tick spotted!

  • So many ticks in this forest. Tufts: Oh, yeah.

  • This is a very ticky forest.

  • Jones: And they're definitely

  • not jumping on you from trees.

  • In fact, ticks can't even jump.

  • They're actually more like opportunists

  • who take what they can get.

  • Tufts: Ticks are what we call sit-and-wait predators,

  • where they climb up to the top of the blades of grass

  • and they put their arms out.

  • And at the top of their arms they have little sticky pads.

  • And those pads will get attracted to this.

  • And this is how they get stuck on your pants

  • or on other animals in the wild as well.

  • Jones: And what do you call the, like,

  • when they stick their hands up like this?

  • Tufts: We call that questing or host-seeking.

  • Jones: Yeah, ticks are literally on a quest for blood!

  • And they've mastered the art of extracting it,

  • all without getting caught.

  • After a tick crawls onto you,

  • it sneaks into a concealed crevice, like your armpit.

  • And after that, it uses two horrifying hooklike structures

  • to tear into your flesh and keep from falling off.

  • Then, they insert what is basically a straw

  • covered in spikes, like a piece of barbed wire,

  • which makes them even harder to remove.

  • And this sounds like it would hurt, a lot.

  • But ticks have another trick up their sleeve,

  • or rather their mouth.

  • Saliva.

  • It's a tick's ultimate weapon to avoid detection.

  • It contains pain-numbing properties,

  • so you don't notice them

  • even as they stab and rip your flesh.

  • Plus, it suppresses your immune system,

  • so the wound is less likely to get red or itchy.

  • That's why ticks can stay in you undetected for days,

  • even as they grow to several times their normal size.

  • And if you do find a tick in time to get it off,

  • it won't die easily.

  • Tufts says that ticks can survive

  • for as long as two years without a blood meal.

  • And they're also masters of the elements.

  • They can tolerate long periods of drought,

  • and some species can survive underwater

  • for two to three days.

  • So, yeah, flushing them down the toilet or sink

  • likely won't kill them.

  • Tufts: If you put them in the sink, sometimes

  • they'll crawl back out of the sink.

  • Jones: Now, all of this wouldn't be such a big problem

  • if it weren't for the diseases they carry.

  • In the US alone,

  • they transmit at least 16 diseases to humans.

  • That's more than any other insect, including mosquitoes.

  • Lyme disease alone, for example,

  • infects an estimated 300,000 Americans each year.

  • And it's only getting worse.

  • In 2004, there were about 23,000 cases of tick-borne disease

  • reported to the CDC.

  • But by 2017,

  • that number had almost tripled to nearly 60,000.

  • But what isn't clear is why.

  • Why ticks and the diseases they carry are spreading.

  • Though Tufts and other scientists say

  • that climate change is at least partly to blame.

  • Tufts: We've been having pretty mild winters,

  • which can promote survival,

  • overwintering survival of hosts and of the vectors,

  • which also will lead to new expansion.

  • Jones: Whatever the reason, there are tons of ticks.

  • Pretty much everywhere.

  • So, the next time you go for a hike,

  • keep these tips in mind.

  • Stay on the trails, where ticks are less likely to hang out.

  • Wear bug spray; preferably something with DEET.

  • Tuck your pants into your socks,

  • so nothing can crawl onto your legs.

  • Wear light clothes, so anything that does get on you

  • is easy to spot.

  • And, of course, always do a tick check

  • once you're out of the woods.

  • All right, so we're gonna do a tick check,

  • which you recommend doing after you get out of the woods.

  • Tufts: Absolutely.

  • Jones: So, crevices...

  • Tufts: What you want to look for is on your pants.

  • I wear rubber boots, so that they don't crawl up there.

  • But, like, for here, my pants,

  • any of these little crevices along here, I would look for.

  • Jones: I mean, I feel like those little guys are definitely,

  • like, the larvae form are definitely on me, right?

  • Somewhere.

  • Tufts: Maybe, maybe not.

  • And then you want to check up around your belt region.

  • Jones: This is, like, not safe for work.

  • Tufts: It's also good when you are hiking with a friend

  • to check each other.

  • So, for instance, I would check your back.

  • Jones: I feel like we're like chimpanzees or something.

  • Tufts: Yeah, grooming behavior.

  • So, you want to check all along the sleeves,

  • on anywhere on the back. Jones: So really, like,

  • on top of clothing?

  • Like, you don't need to, like, strip down?

  • Tufts: No, no, you can strip down later in the shower.

  • Jones: Great.

Benji Jones: In the summer of 2019,

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