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Ticks becoming more common in central Labrador as the region gets warmer

A veterinarian is warning pet owners to take precautions against ticks for the first time in central Labrador, while a researcher said the blood-sucking parasites are slowly becoming more common.
A picture of a tick with a brown body and black legs.
This undated photo provided by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows a black-legged tick, also known as a deer tick. Veterinarian Dr. Rebecca Jackson says ticks are being found on dogs that haven't left Labrador recently. (The Canadian Press)

In the summer of 2023, Dr. Rebecca Jackson noticed something she'd never seen before in her time at the Valley Vet Clinic, the only one in central Labrador: pets who hadn't travelled outside Labrador came in with ticks.

Jackson told CBC News she's concerned the appearances — a deer tick and an American dog tick, both of which are known to carry infections like Lyme disease — signal an emerging trend.

"If we're seeing two, we're wondering how many we're missing as well," she said.

There have always been some ticks around Labrador, including rabbit ticks, Jackson said. The appearance of ticks that carry diseases had always been related to recent travel — but that's now changing, she said. 

Jackson is advising people to check their pets for ticks and to get tick treatment for them if they spend a lot of time in the woods or in long grass, she said.

A blacklegged tick and a bite mark
Jackson advises people to check their pets over for ticks and consider prevention based on their pet's habits. (CBC)

The habitat and habits of ticks are some of the things Prof. Vett Lloyd has been tracking for years from Mount Allison University in Sackville, N.B.

Ticks were picked up in the United States by migrating birds, then dropped off in the spring to the Maritimes and died in the winter, Lloyd said. 

But with climate change, ticks are living through the warmer winters, making them a year-round problem in the Maritimes, Lloyd said. Now birds can pick them up there and take them farther north, she said.

"Now they're not dying off," said Lloyd. "And the problem is that one female tick, once she's had a good meal of blood, can lay about 2,000 to 3,000 eggs. So one tick leads to a lot of ticks pretty quickly." 

A smiling woman with glasses and short grey hair, wearing a lab coat, sits next to a microscope.
Vett Lloyd, a biology professor at Mount Allison University, says warmer winters mean ticks can survive longer and travel farther north. (Submitted by Vett Lloyd)

They've been showing up in increasing numbers in Newfoundland over the past five years, she said, but Labrador was one of the rare places that didn't have any non-travel related ticks — until now. 

"We're starting to see the odd tick being recovered in northern Quebec, and you've got coastline there, so it's kind of only a matter of time," Lloyd said. 

Look for 'moles' with legs, remove with tweezers

And they're not a problem just for pets, but for people too. But since ticks inject a small numbing agent when they bite someone, they can be difficult to feel, Lloyd said. So someone who has been out in the woods or long grass should look themselves over for something that looks like a mole with legs, she said. 

"There's a lot of mythology about the best way to remove ticks. The key point is to remove it. Tweezers work really well — you just pull it out," she said. "It looks disgusting, it sounds disgusting, but the good news is it doesn't hurt." 

A small parasite with eight legs.
Lloyd says the best way to remove ticks is with tweezers. (Victoria Arocho/The Associated Press)

There are also a number of tick medications or treatments that can be given by a veterinarian, Lloyd said. 

"We live in a very beautiful country and summer is always too short. So don't stay inside quivering in fear," Lloyd said. "Go outside anyway and put on some bug spray that'll help to some extent. Be careful and enjoy the world."

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Heidi Atter

Mobile Journalist

Heidi Atter is a journalist working in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador. She has worked as a reporter, videojournalist, mobile journalist, web writer, associate producer, show director, current affairs host and radio technician. Heidi has worked in Regina, Edmonton, Wainwright, and in Adazi, Latvia. Story ideas? Email heidi.atter@cbc.ca.

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