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Volume 23, Number 12—December 2017
Dispatch

Identification of Dermacentor reticulatus Ticks Carrying Rickettsia raoultii on Migrating Jackal, Denmark

Author affiliations: National Veterinary Institute, Lyngby, Denmark

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Abstract

From a migrating golden jackal (Canis aureus), we retrieved 21 live male Dermacentor reticulatus ticks, a species not previously reported from wildlife in Denmark. We identified Rickettsia raoultii from 18 (86%) of the ticks. This bacterium is associated with scalp eschar and neck lymphadenopathy after tick bite syndrome among humans.

Since 2012, Denmark has received a sudden and poorly understood wave of gray wolves (Canis lupus) and golden jackals (C. aureus) migrating long distances from their birthplaces in eastern and central Europe (1). These long-distance dispersals create a risk for introducing tick vectors and pathogens to new geographic areas. We report discovery of Dermacentor reticulatus ticks infected with Rickettsia raoultii from a wild golden jackal in Thorsminde, in the western region of Denmark.

The Study

In February 2017, the wildlife service delivered the body of a golden jackal from Western Jutland, >200 km north of the Denmark–Germany border, to the National Veterinary Institute (Lyngby, Denmark). During necropsy, we collected 21 male Dermacentor reticulatus ticks, a species that had not previously been reported among wildlife in Denmark. We screened the ticks and a blood sample from the jackal for tickborne pathogens by using a high-throughput real-time PCR (2). This assay enables simultaneous detection of 37 European tickborne pathogens, including the spotted fever group (SFG) Rickettsia, and specifically the species R. conorii, R. slovaca, R. massiliae, and R. helvetica, as well as confirmation of 4 tick species, including D. reticulatus (2). Tick DNA was extracted as previously described (3).

PCR confirmed the morphologic characterization: all the ticks collected from the jackal were D. reticulatus. One tick contained Anaplasma phagocytophilum, and 18 ticks contained SFG Rickettsia spp.; however, the specific Rickettsia species was not among the 4 species included in the PCR. To identify the species, we PCR amplified the ompA, ompB, and gltA genes for a subset of 4 samples and sequenced them as previously described (4,5). For the remaining 14 samples, we sequenced the ompA gene. A BLAST search (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/) identified the ompB gene as 100% and the ompA and gltA genes as 99% identical to the genome sequence of the type strain of Rickettsia raoultii sp. nov. strain KhabarovskT (CSUR R3T, ATCC VR-1596T) (6). The specific primers used for gene amplification and sequencing of bacteria identified from D. reticulatus ticks by real-time PCR are provided in the Table. We deposited the sequences we obtained into GenBank (accession nos. MF166729–36 and MF166741–44).

The surge of large carnivores, reaching countries in northern Europe from breeding areas in central Europe, is a recent development that appears to be caused by reduced hunting resulting from effective wildlife protection (1,7). This migration may facilitate the spread of vectors and zoonotic pathogens into new regions. Even if these migrations do not result in the establishment of a new carnivore population, Denmark has high fox and deer densities in the forests, as well as farm animals grazing on pastures, that can support tick species such as D. reticulatus or D. marginatus.

D. reticulatus ticks are spreading rapidly through Europe, and changes in the environment, climate, or both seem to be favorable to the establishment of this tick in areas not previously supporting populations of the species (8). D. reticulatus ticks are established in the southern United Kingdom, and recently, also in the Netherlands. Both countries lack wolf and jackal populations (9). Therefore, it is the actual process of migration and not the establishment of the carnivores in Denmark that constitutes a risk.

However, for these migrations to result in the introduction of ticks, the migrations must first originate in Dermacentor tick–endemic areas, which are located several hundred kilometers south of the Danish border. Second, the migrations must be rapid enough for the ticks to remain attached to the migrating carnivores during the entire migration. Individual gray wolves are indeed capable of migrating distances of 800–1,200 km within a short period; the first wolf known to arrive in northern Jutland has been genetically traced to the border area between Germany, the Czech Republic, and Poland, >800 km away from Denmark (1).

The finding of 21 adult male D. reticulatus ticks on a jackal hunted in western Denmark strongly indicates that jackal migrations are also long enough to originate from Dermacentor tick–endemic areas and fast enough to allow the ticks to complete the migration to Denmark. The origin of the jackal received at the National Veterinary Institute is unknown, but the nearest known breeding populations of golden jackals are in Austria and Hungary (7). Female ticks were absent on the jackal because they drop off after feeding, but each female D. reticulatus tick can lay up to 7,200 eggs (8), which would have been deposited somewhere between the endemic tick region and Denmark. Some of those eggs may have landed in a favorable environment.

The SFG Rickettsia R. slovaca and R. raoultii, which are exotic to Denmark, are the most consequential zoonotic pathogens carried by D. reticulatus ticks. These bacteria are a public health concern because they cause scalp eschar and neck lymphadenopathy after tick bite (SENLAT) syndrome (10,11). SENLAT is an emerging tickborne infection and among the most common tickborne rickettsiosis in Europe (8). The disease is defined as the association of a tick bite, an inoculation eschar on the scalp, and cervical adenopathies (10,11). The main signs and symptoms are a crustaceous lesion (early) or eschar (late) at the site of the tick’s attachment and regional painful lymph nodes (10,11).

R. raoultii was only recently characterized and named from bacteria isolated from Dermacentor tick species collected in Russia and France (6). In 2016, R. raoultii was reported for the first time in Austria and the Czech Republic (12,13). A relatively high prevalence of R. raoultii has been reported in ticks from various regions of Europe, from 14.9% in Austria (12) to 58% in Hungary (14). In the case we report, the high prevalence (85.7%) of R. raoultii–infected ticks from the jackal may have been accentuated by co-feeding transmission between ticks on the same host (8).

We did not identify any rickettsiae from the blood of the jackal by PCR. However, because ticks are able to sustain rickettsial transmission cycles transovarially and transstadially, it is possible that there is, in fact, no host reservoir of R. raoultii (8). If the ticks serve as a reservoir of R. raoultii, the distribution of this bacterium will be identical to that of the tick’s area of dispersal (15). D. reticulatus males remain on the host for 2–3 months and have an intermittent feeding behavior (8). This trait makes them vectors of pathogenic agents, and recent studies have also shown that male D. reticulatus ticks play a strategic role in the transmission of R. slovaca and R. raoultii to humans (8).

Although SENLAT is a milder rickettsiosis, physicians should be aware of the potential diagnosis of this emerging tickborne disease. A reason for concern is that the intracellular Rickettsia infections require treatment with different antimicrobial drugs than, for example, Borrelia infections.

Conclusions

The simultaneous finding of a new carnivore, a new tick vector, and a new zoonotic pathogen in Denmark demonstrates that the unexpected recent wave of large carnivores migrating over long distances into Denmark is more than a theoretical risk to human and animal health. Ixodes ricinus ticks are abundant in most forests in Denmark. However, forests cover only 14% of Denmark’s area, and the preference of D. reticulatus ticks for more open areas could dramatically increase the area of Denmark and northern Europe with a risk for tick bites and tickborne infections.

Dr. Klitgaard is a molecular biologist and senior researcher at the National Veterinary Institute, Technical University of Denmark. Her primary research interests are microbial ecology and the etiology of bacterial diseases.

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Acknowledgments

Special thanks go to Hans Erik Swart and Jens Henrik Jakobsen for handling the jackal.

Necropsy was funded by the Danish Nature Agency project no. 2013/S080-135070. The tick and pathogen analysis was supported by the Danish Veterinary and Food Administration, Ministry of Environment and Food Denmark, and by the Scandtick Innovation project, EU Regional Development Programme InterReg OKS.

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References

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Table

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Cite This Article

DOI: 10.3201/eid2312.170919

Table of Contents – Volume 23, Number 12—December 2017

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René Bødker, National Veterinary Institute (DTU), Kemitorvet, Building 202, 2800 Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark

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Page created: November 16, 2017
Page updated: November 16, 2017
Page reviewed: November 16, 2017
The conclusions, findings, and opinions expressed by authors contributing to this journal do not necessarily reflect the official position of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Public Health Service, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.
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