Half of deer ticks tested by Wisconsin researchers had Lyme-causing bacteria
This March 2002 file photo shows a deer tick under a microscope in the entomology lab at the University of Rhode Island in South Kingstown, R.I. (Victoria Arocho/AP Photo)
A project studying ticks collected from across the state found that just over half of the tested deer ticks had the bacteria causing Lyme disease.
Over the past two years, people have mailed in nearly 12,500 ticks from Wisconsin and the surrounding region to Marshfield Clinic Research Institute’s Tick Inventory via Citizen Science project.
A new paper that is awaiting peer-review shows that just over a quarter of submissions in 2024 were deer ticks, the species known for transmitting Lyme and other diseases to humans.
Of the 707 adult females tested, 51% carried the bacteria that causes Lyme disease.
Alexandra Linz, staff scientist and primary author of the report, said she was surprised by the prevalence of the bacteria.
“It’s not the highest that’s ever been reported in Wisconsin, but it is up there, and it’s higher than we were expecting to see,” she said.
Wisconsin had a record 6,469 cases of Lyme disease in 2024, according to the state Department of Health Services. The agency’s website says the number of cases has quadrupled over the past 20 years, with an average of about 4,600 cases reported each year between 2019 and 2023.
The Marshfield Clinic study found a higher prevalence of the Lyme-causing bacteria in samples from the fall and from southwestern Wisconsin. Linz said the numbers could be influenced by a lower number of samples from the Driftless Area, but she said the region was the first to see the deer tick and has an ideal habitat for the ticks.
She cautioned that the study’s finding does not mean people have a 50-50 chance of getting Lyme disease from a deer tick bite. The ticks needs to be attached for 24 to 36 hours to pass on the bacteria, and Linz said an individual’s immune system response plays a role.
“CDC’s estimates on what that risk value is are more like 3 percent,” Linz said. “Now, that depends on the prevalence in the environment, and we did find higher than expected. So it’s hard to say what the actual risk from a tick bite is, but it is much lower than 51 percent.”
Other tick-borne diseases like anaplasmosis and babesiosis were found at much lower rates among the deer tick samples.
The majority of ticks submitted to Marshfield Clinic’s project were wood ticks, also known as dog ticks, which do not transmit disease to humans. This species is larger than deer ticks, which Linz said is likely why they received so many.
“We definitely got larger ticks in our study than you would get if you were out sampling in the environment,” she said. “That suggests that people are maybe missing finding the really small life stages of the deer tick, which are a major vector of Lyme disease and other tick-borne diseases.”
The project did receive 22 lone star ticks, a species that is considered at risk of moving into the state and may trigger the allergic reaction to red meat, called alpha-gal syndrome. But Linz said the samples were all adult ticks, indicating that the species is not reproducing in Wisconsin and was likely moved by wildlife from neighboring Illinois.
Linz said the institute plans to continue the survey project, which is currently funded by private philanthropic dollars. On top of continuing to receive ticks, she said researchers are working to compare the microbiomes of ticks with and without the Lyme-causing bacteria in the hope of better understanding why certain insects carry the disease.




