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An adult male Gulf Coast tick.
Photo Credit: CDC Public Health Image Library
Scientific Frontline: "At a Glance" Summary: Tick Survival on Home Flooring
- Main Discovery: Two species of ticks, the lone star and Gulf Coast tick, can survive indoors for at least one week and up to three weeks on common hard-surface and carpeted home flooring.
- Methodology: Researchers monitored 90 unfed adult ticks per species across five home flooring types, including tile, wood, vinyl, short-pile carpet, and long-pile carpet. The subjects were individually isolated under cups and observed daily over three rounds of experiments to track survival times against control groups housed in optimal laboratory conditions.
- Key Data: Gulf Coast ticks demonstrated an average survival time of 18 days, reaching a maximum of 25 days on vinyl flooring. Lone star ticks survived an average of 11 days, with their longest survival period reaching nearly 15 days on long-pile carpet.
- Significance: This research offers the first empirical evidence that hitchhiking ticks do not immediately die from indoor desiccation, indicating they remain a viable vector for transmitting diseases like ehrlichiosis and spotted fever within a residential environment.
- Future Application: These findings will be utilized to update public health guidelines, emphasizing the necessity of rigorous indoor tick checks, the immediate heat-treatment of exposed clothing, and the consistent application of preventatives on household pets.
- Branch of Science: Entomology, Public Health, Veterinary Preventive Medicine.

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