Skip to main content
Back to Show
Deep Look

Dog Ticks Are Changing Their Diet. You’re on the Menu

Season 10 Episode 16

Like its name suggests, the brown dog tick dines on dog blood. But as temperatures rise, they're more likely to feast on you, too. That's a problem, because the brown dog tick is a vector for Rocky Mountain spotted fever, a disease that's deadly to both dogs and humans.

Support Provided By
Season
This Fly Torpedoes a Bindweed Bee's Nest
4:58
A “bee fly” is a freeloader that takes advantage of a bindweed turret bee’s hard work.
This Snail Goes Fishing With a Net Made of Slime
4:05
The scaled wormsnail cements its shell to a rock and snags its meals using mucus!
Springtails Do Their Own Stunts
4:04
Step right up to see tiny springtails spin through the air with the greatest of ease!
Gecko Grip: It’s Atomic (Really)
3:44
Geckos navigate nearly any surface with an electron dance at the atomic scale.
Why Do Snakes Have Forked Tongues?
4:31
The snake's forked tongue helps it smell in stereo.
This Mushroom Can Fly
3:22
Bird’s nest fungi look just like a tiny bird's nest. But those little eggs have no yolks.
Toad Tongues Slay With Seriously Sticky Spit
3:36
How are frogs so amazing at catching bugs? It’s their supersoft tongue and special spit.
How Does the Mussel Grow its Beard?
4:00
Mussels create byssal threads to attach themselves to rocks and each other.
Earthworm Love is Cuddly...and Complicated
4:10
Earthworms cozy up with a mate inside tubes of slime to make cocoons full of baby worms.
How Hagfish Unleash a Torrent of Slime
3:52
What keeps the boneless, jawless hagfish thriving after more than 300 million years? SLIME
Citrus Psyllids Bribe Ants With Strings Of Candy Poop
5:04
Researchers use invisible lasers, ghastly wasps and more trickery to protect orange groves
How Hoverflies Spawn Maggots that Sweeten Your Oranges
4:20
As they gorge, oblique streaktail hoverflies help keep orange trees safe from disease.
Active loading indicator