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Longhorned Tick Now Confirmed: NJ, VA, WV, AR, NC, NY, PA, CT, NH, KY, MD, & TN
The Lyme Disease Association reports that according to the National Veterinary Services Laboratory in Ames, Iowa, the Haemaphysalis longicornis tick (otherwise known as the East Asian or Longhorned tick) was found in Virginia, appearing on an orphaned calf on a beef farm in Albemarle County. The longhorned tick has since been identified in Warren County. As of 5/21/18, the tick has been confirmed in West Virginia, and 6/12/18, the tick has also been found in Arkansas, and in July 2018 in Westchester County, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Maryland and Kentucky. Connecticut and New Hampshire have also confirmed the tick in 2018. And most recently, in Tennessee in May 2019 in Union and Roane Counties. October 2019, the tick was detected in an additional six Tennessee counties: Knox, Jefferson, Claiborne, Cocke, Putnam, and Sevier. H. longicornis was initially confirmed in Hunterdon County, NJ, on November 9, 2017 on a sheep farm, and a mystery still surrounds its appearance. The species survived the winter and was confirmed again in NJ in April 2018. There is no known direct link from the Virginia farm to the New Jersey farm. (In addition to the Hunterdon County farm, the Longhorned tick has been confirmed in other parts of NJ: the Rutgers University–New Brunswick’s Cook Campus farm in Middlesex County, and the National Veterinary Services Laboratory recently confirmed a tick taken from a dog in Union County in 2013 was also a Longhorned tick. June 5, 2018, National Veterinary Services Laboratory confirmed the Longhorned tick was found at a location in northern Mercer County. July 21, Longhorned tick found in Bergen County.) The longhorned tick is self-cloning, and is already known to transmit several human diseases, including spotted fever rickettsiosis, in its native East Asian countries – China, Japan and Australia. It may be only a matter of time before they become carriers of tick-borne diseases that affect humans.
UPDATE: Longhorned tick spreading – NOW CONFIRMED IN 12 STATES
10/17/2019 Invasive Tick Detected in Six Additional Tennessee Counties
5/24/2019 ag.tennessee.edu Invasive Tick Detected in Tennessee
5/16/19 wlwt.com Notorious Asian longhorned tick now reported in Kentucky (confirmed in 2018)
11/6/18 vnews.com New Species of Tick Found in New Hampshire
10/1/18 ctpost.com First person bitten by east Asian longhorned tick (in CT)
7/17/18 wgrz.com A new, dangerous tick found in New York
7/12/18 Charlotte Observer New ‘exotic’ tick invades NC, and it’s an ‘aggressive biter.’ How far has it spread?
7/1/18 nj.com This invasive tick is cloning itself. Rutgers DNA researchers are racing to contain it.
6/12/18 4029tv.com First Longhorned Tick confirmed in Arkansas
6/1/18 The Winchester Star Exotic invasive tick found on Warren County horses (Virginia)
5/23/18 Click here for info on Longhorned tick in West Virginia
5/16/18 Click Here for Press Release on Longhorned Tick in Virginia
Related Articles – Longhorned Tick in NJ:
7/21/18 northjersey.com Exotic Longhorned tick found in Bergen County
6/5/18 mycentraljersey.com Longhorned tick spreads to Mercer County
5/10/18 NBC, NY Longhorned Tick Mysteriously Invades New Jersey, Has Already Spread
5/7/18 mnn.com This Self-cloning Tick Now Calls N.J. Home: Longhorned Tick Survived the Winter and is Poised to Spread
4/21/18 LDA website Longhorned Ticks Survived the NJ Winter: Invasive Species May Be Established