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You are here: Home / Health / Why you should brake for possums

Why you should brake for possums

July 23, 2012 By EarthWise

Opossum

[audio:http://wamcradio.org/EarthWise/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/EW-07-23-12-Opossums.mp3|titles=EW 07-23-12 Opossums]

The Virginia opossum is not the brightest of animals. When they are threatened, they pretend to be dead, which where we get the expression “playing possum.” Sometimes, they do this in response to threats from oncoming traffic, which results in possums becoming roadkill.

The next time you see a possum playing dead on the road, try your best to avoid hitting it. Because it turns out that possums are allies in the fight against Lyme disease.

Possums, like many other small and medium sized mammals, are hosts for ticks looking for a blood meal. But possums are remarkably efficient at eliminating foraging ticks.

“In a way, opossums are the unsung heroes in the Lyme Disease epidemic.”

Rick Ostfeld, author of a book on Lyme disease ecology and a senior scientist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies, explains…

“Because many ticks try to feed on opossums and few of them survive the experience.  Opossums are extraordinarily good groomers it turns out – we never would have thought that ahead of time – but they kill the vast majority – more than 95% percent of the ticks that try to feed on them.  So these opossums are walking around the forest floor, hoovering  up ticks right and left, killing over 90% of these things, and so they are really protecting our health.”

So it’s in our best interest to have possum neighbors. This means keeping their habitat intact with thoughtful land use planning, tolerating them in our yards, and, whenever possible, avoiding possum collisions.

Web Extra

Rick Ostfeld, a senior scientist at the Cary Institute, explains how opossum populations decrease with habitat fragmentation…

[audio:http://wamcradio.org/EarthWise/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Ostfeld_web-extra.mp3|titles=Ostfeld_web extra]

Web Links

Lyme Disease: The Ecology of a Complex System, a book by Richard S. Ostfeld

Richard S. Ostfeld’s Research Statement at Cary Institute

Photo, taken on May 11, 2008, courtesy of Jesse Hirsch via Flickr.
 

 

Filed Under: Health, Wildlife and Habitat

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