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A comprehensive investigation into ticks in New York has unveiled a concerning rise in a lesser-known blood parasite, highlighting a potential health threat.
Researchers anticipated encountering significant cases of Lyme disease during their nine-year exploration of Dutchess County’s forest floors in New York, primarily searching for black-legged ticks. Unexpectedly, they discovered another pathogen, previously underestimated, which may pose even greater risks.
The study identified Babesia microti, a parasite that invades red blood cells, leading to babesiosis. This illness is similar to malaria and can be severe or even deadly, particularly for the elderly and those with weakened immune systems. The research indicates it is more widespread than previously believed.
From 2014 to 2022, a team from the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies and SUNY Upstate Medical University examined over 2,000 nymphal ticks. This stage is most likely to bite humans, and the team screened for 16 different pathogens transmitted by animals.
Although Borrelia burgdorferi, the bacteria responsible for Lyme disease, was consistently found at every sampling site and throughout the study years, it was Babesia microti that drew significant attention.
On average, Babesia microti was present in 21 percent of the nymphal ticks tested over the study period, with a notable peak of 42 percent in 2015. This rate is more than twice the sub-10 percent figures observed in previous assessments.
The findings align with rising cases of human babesiosis in the Northeast, where infection rates have increased by roughly nine percent annually between 2015 and 2022, suggesting the parasite is gaining ground even as public attention remains fixed on Lyme disease.
While many infected people never feel sick, others develop flu-like symptoms, such as fever, chills and muscle aches, one to eight weeks after a tick bite. In severe cases, babesiosis can trigger severe anemia, organ failure, respiratory distress and death, with mortality reaching 21 percent in vulnerable groups.
Over nine years trawling Dutchess County forest floors for black-legged ticks, scientists expected to find plenty of Lyme disease. Instead, they discovered another pathogen, Babesia microti, may be an even greater threat
What makes Babesia microti particularly concerning is its tendency to co-infect ticks alongside other pathogens.
The study, published in the journal Ecosphere, found that coinfection with Babesia microti and Borrelia burgdorferi occurred more often than would be expected by chance in seven of the nine study years.
This matters because previous research has shown that Lyme disease infection can help Babesia microti establish itself in tick populations.
‘Coinfection dynamics that facilitate Babesia microti host infection may explain the different prevalence profiles’ between the two pathogens, the researchers wrote, meaning that the two together can make people sicker than either would alone.
Researchers gathered over 2,000 young ticks called nymphs by dragging a cloth through the forest.
The nymphs were then taken to a lab and screened for 16 different animal pathogens using a highly sensitive RNA-based test. This allowed them to track which infectious agents were present and how common they were each year.
At the same time, researchers monitored the populations of white-footed mice and eastern chipmunks, the primary animals that infect ticks with diseases.
Using a method that involved marking them, releasing them and recapturing them, the researchers were able to estimate how many of those animals lived in each gridded area covered in the study.
Researchers collected more than 2,000 nymphal ticks by dragging cloths through the forest. In the lab, they screened each one for 16 different animal pathogens using a sensitive RNA-based test, allowing them to track which infectious agents were present each year and how common they were
When researchers trapped them, they also carefully counted the number of larval ticks feeding on each animal which told them how much contact was happening between ticks and their hosts.
They wanted to see if the number of mice and chipmunks, and how many ticks were feeding on them, could explain and predict the density of infected nymphs in the following year — the key measure of human disease risk.
They found that the number of larval ticks feeding on mice was the strongest predictor of how many infected nymphs would appear the following year.
When mouse populations surged, individual mice carried fewer ticks because the feeding demand was spread across more hosts.
Yet, paradoxically, high mouse abundance still predicted more infected nymphs the following year. More mice meant more larvae fed overall and those larvae matured into the ticks that eventually bite people.
When it came to predicting infection prevalence itself, or the percentage of nymphs carrying disease, chipmunks played an unexpectedly important role.
The probability that a nymph would be infected with Babesia microti was associated with how many larvae fed on chipmunks the previous year, especially when chipmunk populations were high.
Mice have long been considered the primary reservoir for these pathogens, but the research suggests that disease surveillance experts should widen their scope when looking for host animals.
The black-legged tick is pictured. Researchers cautioned that tick-borne illness may be underestimated. Their models consistently underpredicted infection rates during peak years, meaning risk can spike higher than current data can explain
This panel shows how the percentage of infected nymphal ticks changed across the nine-year study for four key pathogens. Babesia microti stood out to researchers. It averaged 21 percent across the study, far exceeding previous regional estimates, and hit a dramatic peak of 42 percent in 2015
The study detected seven of the 16 pathogens screened for, including Powassan virus and two Rickettsia species not typically associated with blacklegged ticks.
Rickettsia rickettsii, which causes Rocky Mountain spotted fever, turned up in nine nymphs in 2016. Rickettsia parkeri was detected in 2021. Powassan virus, a rare but often severe infection, also appeared in one sample that year.
The researchers cautioned that the true scope of tick-borne illness may be underestimated.
Their models consistently underpredicted infection rates when prevalence was highest, meaning that when risk spikes, it tends to spike greater than current data can explain.
The study has important limitations, however. It was conducted entirely on one property in New York, so the findings may not apply to other regions.
The models consistently underestimated infection rates during peak years, meaning some ecological factors weren’t captured.
Climate data was not included, despite its known role in tick survival. Testing could not distinguish dangerous strains of one pathogen from harmless ones and the potential role of other animals, beyond mice and chipmunks, was not fully explored.