Treatment of clothing with a permethrin spray for personal protection against the western black-legged tick,Ixodes pacificus (Acari: Ixodidae) |
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Authors: | R. S. Lane |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Entomological Sciences, University of California, 201 Wellman Hall, 95720 Berkeley, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | The synthetic pyrethroid, permethrin, when applied to clothing with a pressurized spray at an application rate estimated previously to be 4 g a.i./cm2, was found to be 100% effective for personal protection against all three parasitic stages of the western black-legged tick,Ixodes pacificus Cooley and Kohls. This tick has been implicated as the primary vector of the Lyme disease spirochete (Borrelia burgdorferi) to humans in the far-western United States. Periods of exposure to permethrin-treated cloth as brief as 10 and 45 seconds incapacitated 100% of subadult and adult ticks, respectively, within 1–3 h post-treatment. Under field conditions, permethrin appareatly does not repel questing adult ticks, though 100% of ticks recovered from treated clothing after exposures as brief as 15 seconds were moribund 1 h later. |
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