forestgnome said:I will kiss my first black fly.
Puck, you mentioned winter ticks in another thread. What are the implications of a heavy snow winter for black flies and winter ticks on moose? I'm always looking for a silver lining
happy trails
Puck said:There was a thread that coverd this issue in great detail. IICR there is a stage in the tick's development when they attach thmeselves to bushes. When a moose or deer walks by they brush onto thier new host. With ample snow cover these thick can fall to the ground and die off keeping numbers low. I believe the citation was from a NH source.
Here it is posted by Waumbek
http://www.vftt.org/forums/showthread.php?t=6955&highlight=moose+ticks
Puck said:...wont it be a great spring for blackflies???
Just looking ahead.
hikrgrl said:Is it true that blackflies pollinate blueberries, too?
Which would be good, 'cause otherwise I'd have a REALLY tough time finding anything to like about them...
hikrgrl said:Is it true that blackflies pollinate blueberries, too?
forestgnome said:I must have missed that thread. Thanks to Waumbek for the link from F@G. Well, there's my silver lining to this long, nasty winter! Death to the ticks!!!
The article was talking about moose ticks.jrichard said:Is it just me, or did this article only say that only winter ticks are affected? I've never been bit by a winter tick, as far as I know.
Kevin Rooney said:Ticks and leaches have a huge yuck factor. Mosquitoes, knats, black flies - those I can deal with, but ticks and leaches give me the creeps.
Rocky Mountain Spotted fever, ehrlichiosis, relapsing fever (tick fever), tularemia, lyme disease, Colorado tick fever, to name a few...bikehikeskifish said:(Not that ticks aren't without their own disease problems of course)
rocket21 said:Quite honestly, that's the first I've ever heard of that. I worked on a wild low bush blueberry farm for a decade.
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