Pondering Lyme disease
A reader/listener from East Hampton, Long Island, who says he (or she) had Lyme disease in the mid-1980s, sent along these thoughts:
Four somewhat interrelated factors may have coalesced to make Lyme increase in the past two decades:
1. The expansion of second homes into formerly isolated rural areas.
2. A large spike in the deer population as food from gardening has increased, while hunting has diminished.
3. A concomitant increase in field mice populations, which, like deer, are an essential vector for the deer tick.
4. The compassionate removal of feral "house cats" from the wild. These cats are capable of catching and eating 100 field mice per day, which ordinarily would keep the mouse and tick populations down.Each one of these human-centered actions was considered benign in itself; but taken together they may have caused an epidemic.
I don't know whether scientists have studied this possibility, but the outbreak of hysteria culminating in the Salem witch trials may well have been modulated by the Lyme spirochete, with its many attendant mysterious physical and mental symptoms, as settlers began clearing land in New England in the 1600s.







Comments
One factor you left out. In rural and even suburban areas people burned off grassy areas around their homes in the early spring. When fire laws became extremely strict in the 1960's this practice vanished. The fire would kill of the ticks in the area closest to the home.
Posted by: Lynn | July 10, 2009 6:33 AM
Dan,
Look for book "Disguised as the Devil: How Lyme disease created witches and changed history" which is all about how Lyme disease may have occured in the historic past, especially in Salem in 1692.
Posted by: MM Drymon | August 17, 2009 11:22 AM