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Tips about ticks

 

- A female tick can lay up to 3,000 eggs.

- Except for eggs, ticks need a blood meal to progress to the next stage of their life cycle.

- Some ticks can live for more than a year without a meal.

- In very rare cases, toxins secreted by ticks can cause pet paralysis

Ticks

Ticks are wingless creatures that live exclusively on the blood of animals for three of the four stages of their life cycle.  They are equipped with an apparatus called Haller's organ which senses heat, carbon dioxide and other stimuli to allow the ticks to locate the presence of an animal food source.  Once found, they crawl on and embed their mouth parts into the animal's skin and proceed to suck up its blood.

 

You should inspect your pet regularly for ticks, especially if they have been outside in areas where there are woods or tall grasses.  A thorough combing within 4 to 6 hours of exposure to such environments can help prevent ticks from attaching themselves to feast on your pet.  Should you find a tick, it should be removed immediately, as the longer it is attached to it's host, the greater the chance for disease.  Do not touch the tick.  Wear gloves and use tweezers to carefully grasp the exposed section of the ticks body near your pet's skin.  Gently pull until the tick lets go.  To dispose of the tick, wrap it in several tissues and flush it down the toilet.  Do not crush, burn or suffocate it, as any one of those actions may spread to infectious bacteria.