Abstract Background Amblyomma variegatum threatens the Caribbean cattle industry owing to its role as a vector for Ehrlichia ruminantium , the obligate intracellular bacterium that causes heartwater disease, an economically important and potentially fatal ruminant disease. Amblyomma variegatum is also a public health concern as a vector for Rickettsia africae , the causative agent of African tick-bite fever. Efforts to eradicate A. variegatum on Caribbean islands are ongoing to protect cattle from disease and prevent the spread of the vector and diseases to the American mainland. However, reinfestations often occur, possibly owing to the maintenance of ticks by non-cattle hosts that escape treatment. St. Croix in the US Virgin Islands has experienced such eradication challenges. Methods To determine whether persistence of A. variegatum populations on non-cattle hosts contributes to cattle reinfestation on St. Croix, we analyzed 1 non-attached A. variegatum adult female collected from a human and 14 questing adult females collected via cloth dragging along vegetation transects in Lower Love, St. Croix, during 2023. We conducted host bloodmeal analysis by obtaining vertebrate cytochrome c oxidase subunit I ( COI ) sequences from A. variegatum DNA extracts using COI -targeted DNA capture and enrichment to identify the most recent host bloodmeal. We also screened tick DNA extracts for E. ruminantium and Rickettsia DNA using pCS20 Sol1 and PanR8 qPCR, respectively. Rickettsia species identification was determined using ompA polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and Sanger sequencing, followed by phylogenetic analysis. Results We identified vertebrate COI sequences for the genera Capra and Canis in two A. variegatum ticks. Although E. ruminantium was not detected, DNA from R. africae was present in all 15 ticks. Conclusions These results suggest that goats, and possibly canines, may serve as alternative hosts for A. variegatum on St. Croix, US Virgin Islands, which complicates eradication efforts focused entirely on the treatment of cattle. Fortunately, E. ruminantium was not identified in any ticks. However, R. africae was ubiquitous, which may be of concern for public health. Graphical Abstract
Ballard et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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