Molecular detection of vector-borne bacteria in bat ticks (Acari: Ixodidae, Argasidae) from eight countries of the Old and New Worlds.
Sándor HornokKrisztina SzőkeMarina L MeliAttila D SándorTamás GörfölPéter EstókYuanzhi WangVuong Tan TuDávid KovátsSándor A BoldoghAlexandra CorduneanuKinga M SulyokMiklós GyuraneczJenő KontschánNóra TakácsAli HalajianSara EpisRegina Hofmann-LehmannPublished in: Parasites & vectors (2019)
Rickettsiae (from both the spotted fever and the R. felis groups) appear to be associated with soft rather than hard ticks of bats, as opposed to bartonellae. Two tick-borne zoonotic pathogens (R. helvetica and A. phagocytophilum) have been detected for the first time in bat ticks. The present findings add Asia (China) to the geographical range of R. lusitaniae, as well as indicate the occurrence of R. hoogstraalii in South Africa. This is also the first molecular evidence for the autochthonous occurrence of a R. africae-like genotype in Europe. Bat haemoplasmas, which are closely related to haemoplasmas previously identified in bats in Spain and to "Candidatus Mycoplasma haemohominis", are reported here for the first time from Central Europe and from any bat tick.