Climate-driven variation in the phenology of juvenile Ixodes pacificus on lizard hosts
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Background: Ectothermic arthropods, like ticks, are sensitive indicators of environmental changes, and their seasonality plays a critical role in tick-borne disease dynamics in a warming world. Juvenile tick phenology, which influences pathogen transmission, may vary across climates, with longer tick seasons in cooler climates potentially amplifying transmission. However, assessing juvenile tick phenology is challenging in arid climates because ticks spend less time seeking for blood meals (i.e., questing) due to desiccation pressures. As a result, traditional collection methods like dragging or flagging are less effective. To improve our understanding of juvenile tick seasonality across a latitudinal gradient, we examine Ixodes pacificus phenology on lizards, the primary juvenile tick host in California, and explore how climate factors influence phenological patterns.
Methods: Between 2013 and 2022, ticks were removed from 1,527 lizards at 45 locations during peak tick season (M..., The data for this study was collected from 2013 to 2022, primarily during the peak juvenile activity months of Ixodes pacificus ticks, which are March through June. This dataset reflects the collective efforts of various lab groups engaged in ecological research, which included both lizard sampling and tick burden assessments in California, United States. This aggregated dataset includes 45 unique sampling locations and encompasses a total of 253 sampling days. Of the 45 locations, 93% were sampled multiple times, with 84% being sampled three or more times. Various subsets of this data have been published previously by Swei et al 2011, MacDonald et al. 2018, Sambado et al. 2024, Copeland et al. 2025. , , # Climate-driven variation in the phenology of juvenile *Ixodes pacificus* on lizard hosts
[https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.v6wwpzh67](https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.v6wwpzh67)
## Description of the data and file structure
The data for this study was collected from 2013 to 2022, primarily during the peak juvenile activity months of Ixodes pacificus, which are March through June. This dataset reflects the collective efforts of various lab groups engaged in ecological research, which included both lizard sampling and tick burden assessments in California, United States. This aggregated dataset includes 45 unique sampling locations and encompasses a total of 253 sampling days. Of the 45 locations, 93% of locations were sampled multiple times, with 84% being sampled three or more times. Various subsets of this data have been published previously by Swei et al. 2011, MacDonald et al. 2018, Sambado et al. 2024, and Copeland et al. 2025.Â
### Files and variables
#### File: master\_lizardclim...,
创建时间:
2025-03-13



