A TSU biologist has found a rare species of tick

TSU biologist Maria Orlova discovered an extremely rare species of parasite, Spinturnix scuticornis (Acari: Spinturnicidae). The invertebrate was taken from a Himalayan bat caught in Vietnam, where the bat is widespread. This is the first find for the Republic of Vietnam and the fourth in the world. The detection was also unusual: an unidentified tick was found among the parasites that are stored in the Zoological Museum of Moscow State University. The research results are published in the International Journal of Acarology.

- 2020 has limited the possibility of field trips, and each missed field season is a big loss for the researcher. To somehow compensate it, we decided to turn to the existing collections, - says Maria Orlova, a TSU Laboratory of Biological Diversity Monitoring staff member. - My colleague and co-author Sergei Kruskop invited me to work with the collection of bats at the Moscow State University Zoological Museum. At first, it was pure adventurism. There were no guarantees that the parasites would end up on animals, but I made a bet that ticks cling tightly to their hosts, remain in the fur and folds of the wings of even dead animals, and even, as in our case, are found among already collected fly bloodsuckers.

The identification of an unidentified find, which had been stored for over 20 years in an alcohol solution, showed that it was the Spinturnix scuticornis mite (Acari: Spinturnicidae). According to the documentation, the parasite was removed from the Himalayan bat (Myotis siligorensis). This is the first find in Vietnam and the fourth in the world. Previously, this tick was described in Afghanistan, then collected in China, and there is another, not fully confirmed, registration in Azerbaijan. The biology of this tick has not yet been studied, even the main host is not known. However, for the species of the genus Spinturnix, the possibility of their transferring such bat pathogens as Bartonella, Anaplasma, Rickettsia has been described. Their danger to humans remains unexplored, but it is not excluded.

- Southeast Asia still contains a lot of unexplored areas, Vietnam is no exception, - says Maria Orlova. - Unfortunately, our knowledge about bat parasites (both macroparasites - ticks, fleas, bloodsuckers, and microparasites - bacterial, viral, and other pathogens) is still far from exhaustive, which the pandemic has confirmed. In the course of working with the collection of bats at Moscow State University, it was possible to collect excellent material, including from bats that had been stored in the zoological museum for several decades. The data obtained from that research will be presented in a series of articles devoted to mites associated with Vietnamese bats.

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