Eastern Wood Tick
Dermacentor sp.
Description:
1/8"
Habitat:
grasslands
Notes:
I pulled off about 5 ticks after a hike in Fireman's Park on the edge of the city.
Niagara Falls, Ontario, Ontario, Canada
Spotted on Jun 11, 2011
Submitted on Jun 12, 2011
12 Comments
You're right Ashish, it does look like a female dog tick. Again, different common name for maybe the same tick. I'm not sure of the species but the dog tick is a species of Dermacentor, as I have mine identified as.
@Dan....I feel its Female of Dog Tick...Tell me I find wrong or right..!!
Lucky it was not an Australian Paralysis Tick.. they are really horrible!
No, its a tick for sure. Unfortunately, I have lots of experience with them.
@Dan it is snout beetle or Weevil...?
Thanks for the info Nick. I've always heard about this way to remove them but it's easier said than done! Thankfully most of the bites I've received from ticks in Canada have been very minor. They weren't latched on to me for too long before I noticed them.
Nasty things.. got bitten a few times myself.. if one is bit, try to use twizzers to pull it out, since they burrow their heads under the skin and if pulled without care, the head snaps off and remains and infection can set it..
Nick
Latimeria, I just looked through the Audobon guide to North American insects and found one that looked like it in there. Even they didn't give the species. I guess you have to start with if it's a hard body tick or soft body. Male and females look different too. I think you should get a real macro shot of it to the color the best and any identifying characteristics like spots on the legs or color on the head. A small shield near its head is also an identiflying characteristic. This one in my spotting is a female. I hope this helps, I'm not great at ID'ing ticks by any means.
Yes this holds good for Lyme disease ticks mostly.
i thought only lyme disease tick bites gave bulls eye rashes
Tick bites usually give you a bulls eye rash which is reddish in color.
Hey Dan, do you have any idea on how to identify ticks? I found one on me after a hike a few days ago and I kept it, but I'm not too sure where to start on its identification.