Preprint Communication Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Potential Tick Defense Associated with Skin and Hair Characteristics in Korean Water Deer (Hydropotes inermis argyropus)

Version 1 : Received: 24 September 2023 / Approved: 25 September 2023 / Online: 26 September 2023 (03:22:22 CEST)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Lee, S.-J.; Kim, K.-Y.; Kim, G.; Moon, S.; Park, Y.-C.; Cho, H.-S.; Oh, Y. Potential Tick Defense Associated with Skin and Hair Characteristics in Korean Water Deer (Hydropotes Inermis Argyropus). Animals 2024, 14, 185, doi:10.3390/ani14020185. Lee, S.-J.; Kim, K.-Y.; Kim, G.; Moon, S.; Park, Y.-C.; Cho, H.-S.; Oh, Y. Potential Tick Defense Associated with Skin and Hair Characteristics in Korean Water Deer (Hydropotes Inermis Argyropus). Animals 2024, 14, 185, doi:10.3390/ani14020185.

Abstract

The Korean water deer (WD), the dominant wildlife species in South Korea, is classified as vul-nerable on the IUCN Red List. Beside their several unique characteristics, they have a lower in-cidence of tick bites compared to other Cervidae species, particularly roe deer (RD). In natural environments, ticks exhibit questing behavior by waiting on grasses to climb onto host's hair coat. They use sensory organs to detect signals such as body temperature and chemicals from the host's skin, then move to preferred feeding location. Therefore, we conducted a comparative analysis of the skin tissue and hair features of both species to compare the factors leading to lower incidence of tick bites in WD. Notably, WD had significantly larger blood vessels, sebaceous glands, and sweat glands which maintain the barrier functions of the skin (p≤0.004), irregular scale surfaces in hair cuticles, and stiff and 2.83-times thicker primary hair diameter (p<0.001). Each parameters made the ticks difficult to move onto the epidermis of WD. To our knowledge, this is the first report which is focused on the comparative analysis for skin and hair feature in WD and RD. We suggest that these differences may attribute to evade tick bites in WD.

Keywords

Korean water deer; skin tissue; hair characteristics; comparative pathology; tick bites

Subject

Biology and Life Sciences, Animal Science, Veterinary Science and Zoology

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