Mysterious ticks from Asia that can carry a deadly virus are now spreading in the US

Brian4Liberty

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This story is from 2018, but apparently, these ticks and the diseases they carry have now become established in the US, and are infecting cattle farms...

Mysterious ticks from Asia that can carry a deadly virus are now spreading in the US — and efforts to kill them are failing
By Kevin Loria - Apr 27, 2018

It wasn't just one strange tick that caused Hunterdon County Health Department officials in New Jersey to start panicking when a resident showed up to ask about what she found crawling all over her sheep.

There were what turned out to be — on the resident, her sheep, and in the paddock — hundreds of them.

These ticks were of a sort that had never been seen in the US before. They were Haemaphysalis longicornis, longhorned or bush ticks from East Asia. In Asia and Australia, they've appeared in such numbers that they've killed cattle by draining them of their blood, exsanguinating them. And they've been known to carry a potentially deadly virus that can cause severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS), which first emerged in China in 2009 and has been spreading rapidly since then.

Efforts to wipe these ticks out in New Jersey have been failing, and there are now thousands of them there, according to a local news report by CBS New York.

And while the first ticks tested back in November didn't show signs of SFTS or Lyme disease, which they may be able to transmit as well, experts are still concerned that some of the ticks could be carrying pathogens. The recently collected specimens are being tested now.

"It has the potential [to carry SFTS]," microbiologist James Occi told CBS NY. "That’s why we're worried."

The fact that the ticks survived both the mid-Atlantic winter and eradication attempts is extremely bad news.

No one knows where the ticks came from in the first place. The Hunterdon resident's 12-year-old Icelandic sheep "had no history of travel outside the country," researchers wrote in a report about the infestation.

They treated the sheep several times and tried to eliminate the pests from the paddock. They didn't find any ticks there by mid-November of 2017, but temperatures had dropped below freezing by then, which meant the creatures had possibly retreated underground.

That turned out to be the case. As CBS reported, lab tests have also shown that a number of the ticks survived carbon dioxide traps as well, making them resilient little creatures.

As an invasive species, these ticks have a bad reputation.

The species can be parthenogenetic, meaning the ticks can reproduce asexually, essentially cloning themselves (this study provides more details on the unique reproductive processes of these particular ticks).

Australia and New Zealand have had serious problems with this tick, which is capable of intense infestations and appearing in very large numbers.

And aside from SFTS and potentially Lyme disease, these ticks are also known to carry diseases like Anaplasma, Ehrlichia, Borrelia, and a form of spotted fever, according to the original report about the infestation.

"[W]e advocate continued vigilance because even if this species is not already established in the United States, suitable hosts and habitats are common and widespread here," that report's authors wrote.

And the fact that these ticks are still around could mean that tick season in New Jersey and the Northeast might be even worse than normal this summer and for years to come.
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More: https://www.businessinsider.com/hae...-ticks-in-new-jersey-may-carry-disease-2018-4
 
Terrifying clone tick swarms are killing US cattle by draining their blood, now chasing after humans
Jul 14, 2019

Worried about a Cascadia earthquake, a nuclear war or about climate change?

Phffft! Asian longhorned ticks – sometimes called “clone ticks” because they can reproduce without mating – have killed five cows in North Carolina, by draining them out of blood. Each cow was infested by hundreds of ticks. And experts now fear for humans!

Ravenous swarms of cloned ticks have killed a fifth cow in North Carolina by exsanguination — that is, by draining it of blood. The official cause of death is acute anemia, which is typically associated with severe hemorrhaging.
...
In the U.S., Asian longhorned ticks have been found in Arkansas, Connecticut, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Tennessee and West Virginia.
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The CDC recommends that people take precautions against ticks, such as avoiding “wooded and brushy areas with high grass and leaf litter,” and to examine clothing and do a “full-body check” after being outdoors.

The clone tick is known to:

  • Spread SFTSV, short for the Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus. SFTSV is related to Heartland virus found in the US and has had reported mortality rates up to 30%.
  • Transmit Rickettsia japonica, the cause of Japanese spotted fever, and Theileria orientalis, which is behind cattle theileriosis. It has also been found harboring relatives of US pathogens, including those that cause anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis, babesiosis, and the Powassan virus. ​

...
More: https://strangesounds.org/2019/07/u...g-blood-humans-infections-health-disease.html
 
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A new tick-borne disease is killing cattle in the US
The emerging disease is threatening the livestock industry. Critics say the government has been slow to respond.
by Britta Loktingarchive - November 17, 2022

In the spring of 2021, Cynthia and John Grano, who own a cattle operation and sell performance horses in Culpeper County, Virginia, started noticing some of their cows slowing down and acting “spacey.” They figured the animals were suffering from anaplasmosis, a common infectious disease that causes anemia in cattle. But Melinda McCall, their veterinarian, had warned them that another disease carried by a parasite was spreading rapidly in the area.

After a third cow died, the Granos decided to test its blood. Sure enough, the test came back positive for the disease: theileria. And with no treatment available, the cows kept dying. In September, by which time the couple had already lost six cows and seven calves, Cynthia noticed a cow separated from the herd. She was walking up to it when it suddenly charged at her and knocked her over, breaking her shoulder blade. By that afternoon, the cow was dead.

Cattle owners like the Granos are not alone. Livestock producers around the country are confronting this new and unfamiliar disease—if they can detect it in their herds at all—without much information. Researchers still don’t know how theileria will unfold in the United States, even as it quickly spreads west across the country. If states can’t get the disease under control, then nationwide production losses from sick cows could significantly damage both individual operations and the entire industry.
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More: https://www.technologyreview.com/2022/11/17/1063352/new-tick-borne-disease-killing-cattle-in-us/
 
Scare people out of the woods? check.
Reduce beef supply? check.
Excuse for new vaccine? check.
 
They are attacking our food supply. They are already foreshadowing bird flu, they have the vaccines standing by.
 
Go to the 21:45 mark:


https://rumble.com/v2bgkhi-tucker-carlson-tonight-full-episode-wednesday-march-1.html
 
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