Igor Uspensky
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Featured researches published by Igor Uspensky.
International Journal of Medical Microbiology | 2002
Igor Uspensky; Inna Ioffe-Uspensky
Three cases of the tick Rhipicephalus sanguineus infiltration in or near human dwellings caused by dogs, and their influence on epidemiological features of human habitats have been investigated. (a) The observation of dogs kept indoors proved that single tick females could engorge and oviposit inside apartments followed by the development of subadults. (b) Abundant micropopulations of ticks were formed in small yards or gardens near the dwellings where dogs lived in kennels. (c) A huge field population of R. sanguineus was observed on a farm where watchdogs constantly patrolled along the farm perimeter. Tick abundance near the kennels and in the permanent resting sites of the dogs reached more than 30 adults per 10 min of collecting, while the number of adults on a dog reached 100. Unfed adult females under conditions of constant dog availability had a larger scutal index than females collected in the control field site. On the basis of circumstantial evidence it is possible to conclude that under the above conditions tick development may change from the normal 3-host cycle to a 2-host cycle. Ticks in the field had one complete generation per year. Ticks on the farm, as well as ticks in kennels, developed faster and a significant part of their population had two complete generations per year. R. sanguineus is the main vector and reservoir of a pathogen from the Rickettsia conorii complex, the causative agent of Israeli tick typhus. The described conglomerations of R. sanguineus create a great risk to humans who can be attacked by infected ticks in and around their homes, even in large towns. Such a feature of the tick life history most likely exists not only in Israel but in other countries as well.
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases | 2014
Igor Uspensky
Ticks have always been a part of fauna in and around human settlements, and their significance changed concurrently with the enlargement of settlements and their transformation into towns. The increased rate of urbanization during the last decades has created a new reality for tick existence. Two groups of ticks are of major concern for modern towns: those living under natural conditions of urban surroundings and those well-adapted to urban conditions. During the process of urbanization, encroachment into forested and uncultivated areas as well as protection of existing green spaces create opportunities for ticks living in nature to also exist under urban and suburban conditions. Conditions of modern urban and especially suburban environment in developed European countries adequately meet tick requirements. Tick species having an advantage in urban areas are those that can use one and the same host at all parasitic stages, can starve for a prolonged time, can use either urban pests or domesticated animals as hosts, and can live in man-made buildings. The ticks of the Argas reflexus group (Argasidae) and the brown dog tick Rhipicephalus sanguineus (Ixodidae) comply with practically all conditions necessary for successful survival in urban areas. The ability of ticks to transmit numerous human and animal pathogens and the presence of many reservoir hosts in urban and suburban areas create persistent danger for human populations and domestic animals. Impact on urban ticks should be directed against the two major requirements of tick existence: reducing populations of potential tick hosts (feral pigeons, stray dogs and cats, and urban rodents), and changing other environmental conditions to make them less suitable for ticks. It is especially important that urban inhabitants be properly informed about the danger posed by ticks, the sites of possible tick attacks, and basic self-protection techniques.
Experimental and Applied Acarology | 2006
Igor Uspensky; Yuri V. Kovalevskii; Edward I. Korenberg
In some studies the prevalence of tick infection (infection rate) and the intensity of infection are negatively correlated with unfed tick age (in the broad sense of this term). However, no special research has been carried out to consider the phenomenon thoroughly. The infection indices of the female taiga ticks, Ixodes persulcatus, infected with Borrelia burgdorferi s.l. were related to tick physiological age, an index that more precisely reflects tick physiological state than the time of tick collection in the field or the duration of tick survival under laboratory conditions. A novel quantitative technique of physiological age determination based on the evaluation of the ratios between sizes of the stable (scutum) and the changing (alloscutum) structures of the tick body was used. The age was estimated in accordance with the classical age-grade scale introduced by Balashov and a more fractional scale determined by the new technique. In total, 131 female ticks were examined for their infection and physiological age, 46 of which were infected with B. burgdorferi s.l. (mean infection rate 35.1%). The minimal intensity of infection was 0.4 bacterial cells per 100 fields of view whereas the maximal infection was 172 cells. There was no difference between the prevalence of infection in ticks of different physiological age. The intensity of infection obviously differed between ticks of different age groups in the scale introduced by Balashov but did not significantly differ between ticks of different age groups according to the fractional age-grade scale. The data concerning the relationships between Borrelia burgdorferi and unfed Ixodes ticks are considered.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 2003
Igor Uspensky; Ralph M. Garruto; Lev G. Goldfarb
Abstract The finding of an unfed adult female of the taiga tick Ixodes persulcatus Schulze is reported from the northern part of Eastern Siberia (the central part of the Sakha Republic [former Yakutia]) of Russia. This finding supplements other reported single findings of the taiga tick in different sites of the central part of the Sakha Republic, thus increasing its distributional range. The reproductive range of the taiga tick is limited to two separate areas in the southern parts of the Republic. The most probable mode of tick introduction northwards from the border of the reproductive range is by spring bird migrations from their wintering areas to breeding sites. The possibility of the establishment of stable tick populations in the areas of introduction is also considered.
Experimental and Applied Acarology | 1993
Igor Uspensky
Patterns of attacking hosts by two closely related species of ixodid ticks (Ixodes persulcatus and I. ricinus) were compared in parallel field tests. The ability of active unfed adults of both sexes to adhere to a flannel flag dragged over grass vegetation and to remain on the flag during this process were estimated. The tests were conducted under two temperature conditions, 6–10°C and 17–22°C. In all test versions, adults of I. persulcatus were more successful both in adhering to the flag and in remaining on it. There were no consistent differences between males and females of the same species. The results demonstrated a differing ability of successful attack in both tick species. This ability is a complex derivative of the tick activity and aggressiveness. An attempt is made to analyse the latter phenomenon, which is considered as a general one for all bloodsucking arthropods. The aggressiveness of arthropods should be taken into account as one of the leading factors influencing the sampling results.
Archive | 1999
Igor Uspensky; Inna Ioffe-Uspensky; Kosta Y. Mumcuoglu; Rachel Galun
Absolute and relative weight characteristics of 25 species of three-host exophilic ticks from 5 genera (Ixodes, Haemaphysalis, Dermacentor, Rhipicephalus, Hyalomma) have been compared. Ixodes and Haemaphysalis species differ from Hyalomma species by having lighter unfed females, heavier eggs and, hence, considerably smaller interstage compensatory growth. Ixodes and Haemaphysalis species considered in this paper are typical forest ticks while the Hyalomma species are typical ticks of open areas. Dermacentor and Rhipicephalus species by some absolute weight parameters (egg weight and unfed adult body weight, respectively) are similar to forest ticks but, according to the relative weight characteristics (weight ratios between unfed females and eggs, and between engorged and unfed nymphal ticks), they seem to be closer to the ticks of open areas. In Hyalomma, Dermacentor and Rhipicephalus species, the compensatory growth is mainly realized through a large weight increase during nymphal feeding. Several patterns of weight increase during feeding at each developmental stage are distinguished.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1992
Igor Uspensky; Inna Ioffe-Uspensky
For effective control of pest or vector populations it is necessary to understand how the process of their suppression by control agents occurs. A model of the population suppression made on the basis of data on pest population biology can be helpful for this purpose. Such a model was proposed for Ixodes persulcatus, one of two main vectors of the tick-borne encephalitis (TJ3E) virus in the USSR.’ The model has shown how suppression of the whole population is achieved through suppression of certain parts (different stages) of the population (FIG. 1). Data presented in the first part of this paper2 make it possible to explain the process of suppression in more detail and to examine whether the model corresponds to the real process. Since Zxodespersulcatus is an organism specific to the USSR, almost all the literature on its biology and control is in Russian.
Ticks and Tick-borne Diseases | 2017
Inna Ioffe-Uspensky; Igor Uspensky
Prostriate ticks (subfamily Ixodinae, genus Ixodes) can copulate and the females can be inseminated before attachment to the host. In tests with Ixodes persulcatus females collected in the field and fed without males on the host, it was shown that this preprandial insemination is necessary and sufficient for successful engorgement and oviposition if female feeding took place in up to 1 month after collection. A 2-month period between preprandial insemination and female feeding was followed by a significant decrease in the proportion of normally engorged females and significant increase in egg mortality. If a small number of males were added to feeding females in this case, the number of normally engorged females increased but the egg mortality remained as high. Spermatophore destruction during the 2-month period is assumed to have a negative effect on the viability of eggs produced after additional (perprandial) insemination. Prostriate ticks are believed to be an intermediate group between argasid and metastriate ticks. Transition from nidicolous parasitism in argasid ticks to exophily (pasture parasitism) in metastriate ticks determines the change in mating strategy from off-host to on-host copulation. We review the available data concerning mating strategies in representatives of different subgenera of the genus Ixodes in the context of this evolutionary relationship.
Journal of Medical Entomology | 1995
Igor Uspensky
Journal of Medical Entomology | 1997
Inna Ioffe-Uspensky; Kosta Y. Mumcuoglu; Igor Uspensky; Rachel Galun