Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17
Lone Star Ticks Spread Into 3 U.S. Regions as Alpha-Gal Cases Rise
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17

Lone Star Ticks Spread Into 3 U.S. Regions as Alpha-Gal Cases Rise

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17

Summary

  • Tick season is in full swing and could last into fall as lone star ticks, once concentrated in the South, keep expanding into parts of the Northeast and Midwest.
  • Warming climate, land-use changes and growing deer populations have helped push the species into new areas, alongside rising reports of alpha-gal syndrome — a red-meat allergy triggered by some bites.
  • Risk remains uneven: experts say established populations are still concentrated in the South, with northern limits generally around southern New Jersey, downstate New York, Long Island and Martha’s Vineyard.
  • New England is not broadly overrun, specialists said, though the tick has moved somewhat into Connecticut, underscoring that exposure is growing but still geographically concentrated.

Insights

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