| 1. | Lone star ticks will also feed on humans at any stage of development.
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| 2. | Alpha-gal allergy may be triggered by lone star tick bites.
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| 3. | Rocky Mountain spotted fever is transmitted by the lone star tick and the American dog tick.
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| 4. | The Lone Star tick has been identified as a probable host that has transmitted two forms of human ehrlichiosis.
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| 5. | Adult lone star ticks usually feed on medium and large mammals, and are very frequently found on white-tailed deer.
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| 6. | Lone star ticks infected with the bacterium Ehrlichia chaffeensis, transmit ehrlichiosis, which was first diagnosed in humans in 1986.
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| 7. | _A form of ehrlichia, an immune disorder, that is carried by the so-called Lone Star tick, which lives on white-tailed deer.
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| 8. | The allergy most often occurs in the central and southern United States, which corresponds to the distribution of the lone star tick.
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| 9. | The South is eaten up with ticks, particularly the Lone Star tick, almost as big as the state for which it's named.
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| 10. | The virus was taken from a Lone Star Tick, which had been removed from a woodchuck in the Land Between the Lakes region of Western Kentucky.
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