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Adult deer tick, Ixodes scapularis.
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Ticks Dont Come Out in the Wash
By Ann Perry
October 5, 2007 Before venturing into tick-infested
territory, you used a topical repellant on exposed skin and outer clothing.
When you returned, you did a body check and threw your clothes in the wash. But
clean clothes may not be tick-free clothes.
When he found a live lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum) on the
agitator of his washing machine, Agricultural Research Service (ARS) entomologist
John
Carroll decided to find out how tough ticks are. So he bagged up nymphs
from two speciesthe lone star tick and the deer tick, (Ixodes
scapularis), the creature that transmits Lyme diseaseand put them in
the washing machine.
Carroll used a combination of water temperature settings and detergent types
to wash the ticks. The majority of lone star ticks survived all the
water-detergent combinations with no obvious side effects. Most of the deer
ticks lived through the cold and warm water settings as well. But when one type
of detergent was used with a hot water setting, only 25 percent of the deer
ticks survived.
When it came time to dry, all the ticks of both species died after an hour
of tumbling around at high heat. But when the dryer was set to "no
heat," about one-third of the deer ticks and more than half of the lone
star ticks survived.
Carroll placed the ticks in mesh bags, which kept them from draining away
during the rinse cycle and perhaps increased their odds for survival. However,
ticks might also survive a sudsy interlude by sheltering in the folds and
crevices of a typical load of laundry. Some tick species have been observed to
survive hours of submersion in fresh water.
Both adult ticks and nymphs can transmit disease. Carrolls research
reinforces recommendations by the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention to wash and dry clothes at high
temperatures after spending time in areas known to harbor ticks.
Carroll conducts research at the
ARS
Animal Parasitic Diseases Laboratory, Beltsville, Md.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.