Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Ticks Found By Satellite?? Cool

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Skip

to Main ContentHeaderVisit NASA.govConnectContact UsGlossarySite MapSearch SiteGo!CloseHomeBig QuestionsEarthHeliophysicsPlanetsAstrophysicsMissionsAbout UsScience NewsNASA Science: Science NewsFor ResearchersCitizen ScientistsFor EducatorsFor StudentsFor KidsHome

â†'

Science News

â†'

Science@NASA

Headline News

â†'

2010

â†'

Tracking Ticks via Satellite

Tracking Ticks via Satellite

Play

AudioDownload

AudioJoin Mailing ListMay 28, 2010: Finding a tick usually involves a squeamish self-examination – carefully

rubbing fingertips through the scalp, meticulously scanning the body, and groaning "eyeww" if a little bloodsucker is discovered.

Blacklegged ticks are known as one of the disease transmitting organisms for Lyme disease. (Credit: CDC) [larger

image]

Now, there's a new way to find the pesky, disease-laden critters--via satellite!

University of Alabama at Birmingham graduate students Renneboog and Firsing are pioneering the new technique as part of a NASA program called DEVELOP. They've been using satellite images of

Alabama's Talladega National Forest to reveal areas of the forest where

ticks likely flourish.

Knowing tick whereabouts is important. Ticks can deliver some very

unwelcome visitors into your bloodstream: the toxins and organisms that

cause Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, Southern Tick Associated Rash Illness, and Lyme Disease.

"Our goal was to identify high-risk zones for these diseases," explains Renneboog. "We know that ticks prefer moist, heavily vegetated areas, so we wanted to map those areas."

Tick hosts include white-tailed deer, white-footed mice, and you. Lurking like mini-vampires, ticks wait for one of these unsuspecting passersby on whom to feast. Without blood meals, ticks die. Some ticks' saliva contains a blood thinner to make it easier for them to feed. The saliva may also contain neurotoxins that keep you from feeling pain as the tick digs its barbed mouth into your skin and enjoys a meal at your expense.

Likely tick habitats related to high NDVI (Normalized Difference

Vegetation Index) and soil moisture levels were identified around the Black Warrior River in Central Alabama. [larger

image]

Dr. Jeff Luvall of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center mentored Renneboog and Firsing in their tick hunt, which took place in UAB's Laboratory for Global Health Observation. "I taught the students how to use infrared images from an instrument on the Terra satellite to analyze

soil moisture and vegetation."

The two students used what they learned from their NASA advisor to

classify levels of vegetation and moisture in 12 locations in the forest. They then created detailed digital maps and images showing likely tick habitats – areas where dense vegetation overlapped those with high soil moisture.

To confirm that the maps were accurate, Renneboog and Firsing needed some old-fashioned, ground-level tick counts for comparison. They

used data provided by ville State University faculty and students, who collected ticks by dragging large white clothes through bushes and grasses. They actually counted the ticks by hand and identified their species.

A "bull's-eye" rash appears at the site of a tick bite on the right upper arm of a woman who subsequently contracted Lyme disease. (Credit: CDC) [larger

image]

"One of our aims for this study is to raise awareness about ticks –

where they live, how they behave, what diseases they carry," adds Firsing. "For example, it's not widely known that there's Lyme disease in Alabama now. But there is and has been for a while. The first case was actually documented in this state in 1986."

As part of their DEVELOP project, Renneboog and Firsing do outreach work, presenting their findings at conferences and talking to the public. This summer, for instance, they'll work with Girl Scout Troops.

"We'll teach them to use repellents, wear long pants, tuck in their shirt, and wear socks when they go into the woods," says Renneboog.

"And we'll teach them how to properly remove a tick if it latches onto them," adds Firsing. "You need to use tweezers. If you try to pinch

the tick's body with your finger tips and pull the tick off, you'll squeeze it, and the tick will regurgitate the contents of its gut into your bloodstream."

Eyeww!

"That's how they infect you," he says.

Bring on the satellites.

Author:

Dauna

Coulter | Editor: Dr.

Tony | Credit: Science@NASA

More Information

Renneboog and Firsing attend the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Several other students participated in the study as well.

DEVELOP is a mentorship and training program sponsored by the Applied Sciences Program in NASA's Earth Science Division of the Science Mission Directorate in Washington,

D.C. DEVELOP engages students in scientific fieldwork and lab study and

teaches them how to analyze research results and share them with scientific and public communities. The students deliver research results, measurements and predictions that address local policy and environmental concerns, and develop professional-caliber products to aid

community leaders and local and state governments with decision-making.

In the process, the students gain real-world research experience -- and

the capability to contribute immediately to the science community.

The Laboratory for Global Health Observation

was developed in the summer of 2006 by Parcak, Ph.D., in Anthropology and Tennant Mc, Ph.D., former dean of Social and Behavioral Sciences, as a partnership between the Schools of Social and Behavioral Sciences and Public Health. The potential for a remote sensing lab, in particular the medical and health research possibilities, evolved into a partnership with Max , Ph.D., dean of the School of Public Health. The primary focus of the remote sensing lab is medical and health-based applications for satellite remote sensing. The overall mission is to look at broad-scale applications of satellite remote sensing and ways in which this information can be used across diverse fields in the context of international outreach programs.

Dr. Parcak is director of the laboratory.

Science NewsScience@NASA Headline News201020092008200720062005200420032002200120001999199819971996News & FeaturesPress ReleasesRSS FeedsFreedom of Information ActBudgets, Strategic Plans and Accountability ReportsThe President's Management AgendaPrivacy Policy and Important NoticesInspector General HotlineEqual Employment Opportunity Data Posted Pursuant to the No Fear ActInformation-Dissemination

Priorities and InventoriesUSA.govExpectMore.govNational Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA Official: Ruth NettingSend us your comments!

Last Updated: May 28, 2010GlossarySite MapAdobe

ReaderHomeBig QuestionsEarthHeliophysicsPlanetsAstrophysicsMissionsAbout UsScience NewsFor ResearchersFor EducatorsFor KidsCitizen ScientistsAsk a Scientist

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...