| Ticks are important to human and veterinary medicine 
	for a variety of reasons:
 
 
 
	as vectors of  bacterial, protozoal, rickaettsial, spirochaetal 
	and  viral diseases of humans, domestic stock and companion animals.  
        as ectoparasites with irritating bites causing extensive harm 
	to their hosts due to blood loss, damage to the skin and anorexia 
	leading to reduction in growth. 
        as agents of 'tick paralysis' in man and animals, probably due 
	to the secretion of toxic substances in their saliva.
	in exacerbating the lesions caused by Dermatophilosus 
	congolensis (dermatophilosis) in cattle, goats and sheep; this is 
	caused by immunosuppressive effects of the tick feeding.  
	in  predisposing their hosts to other arthropod infestations 
	such as the screwworm fly, Cochliomyia  hominovorax.
 
 | |   Rhipicephalus 
	appendiculatus, the brown ear tick, feeding on the ear of a calf. 
	This African tick transmits Theileria parva infections, Anaplasma 
	centrale and Babesia bigemina which cause East Coast fever, 
	anaplasmosis and babesiosis respectively in cattle.
 
 |  Engorged female of Hyalomma sp. feeding on the skin between 
	the spines of a hedgehog.
 
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