Archived News |
August 26, 2011
Â黨ӰԺ student research contributes to unusual parasite findings in Colombia
Most  Louisianans are familiar with ticks – those pesky, blood-sucking  arachnids that thrive in humid environments, particularly wooded or  grassy areas. New evidence is emerging, however, indicating that ticks  can thrive on a reptile whose entire life is spent in or near the water.
    
For six weeks this summer, Lisa Brown, 25, a graduate student of biology  at the University of Louisiana at Monroe, studied the biogeographic  phenomenon at two field sites, including a small tropical island off the  Pacific coast of Colombia, South America, where an aquatic turtle of  the genus  Rhinoclemmys, carried the parasite. 
  
  "Leeches typically fill that niche on aquatic turtles, but there are no  leeches on the island," Brown explained. "I just thought it seemed  interesting and really bizarre. I started doing research to see if  anything had been documented about it, and I only found a couple of  papers that described it in certain mammals. I got more excited because  it seemed like a really unique project to take on."
  
    She says the ticks may have gills enabling them to breathe under water  and presented her findings at the Ninth Annual Symposium on the  Conservation and Biology of Tortoises and Freshwater Turtles, Aug.  14-17, the joint annual meeting of the Turtle Survival Alliance and the  IUCN Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Specialist Group. 
  
    In an unusual twist, on the Colombian mainland the same species of  turtle is virtually devoid of the ticks, and instead boasts a large  number of leeches, according to Brown. Brown finished her undergraduate  studies at the University of Texas at Tyler and is scheduled to graduate  Â黨ӰԺ in May 2012.
  
Dr. John L. Carr, a professor of biology at Â黨ӰԺ, said Brown's research  interest in parasites was a great way to involve her in the turtle  research in Colombia that Carr has been collaborating on with colleague,  Dr. Alan Giraldo, of the Universidad del Valle, for the last several  years.
  
  "We worked on three manuscripts and she greatly contributed to our  work," said Carr. "I was happy to provide her this unique opportunity to  study and travel in South America. I think she has a bright future  ahead of her as a biologist."
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