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The Mechanism of Feeding in Ticks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

S. K. Sen
Affiliation:
Entomologist, Imperial Institute of Veterinary Research, Muktesar, U.P., India

Extract

The mechanism of feeding in ticks has been fully described in numerous text-books. Briefly, it is believed to be as follows: After the tick has fixed itself on the host's body by means of the denticles on the ventral surface of the hypostome, the chelicerae, or the so-called mandibles, are brought into action, and the “protrusion and retraction of the shaft, together with the extension of the teeth on the digits, results in a saw-like movement which tears a hole in the skin” (Patton and Cragg, 1913). More recently, Sharif (1928) has suggested the possibility that the actual incisions in the skin of the host are, as a rule, made by the cheliceral digits and that through the incisions thus made, the proboscis (i.e. the chelicerae and the hypostome collectively) is pushed into the deeper tissues.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1935

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References

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