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by estearum
7 hours ago
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... is this a serious comment? > explanations should be backed by data, it's lazy otherwise > I personally haven't noticed an increase The relationship between temperature, wetness/humidity, and tick range is extremely well-understood. Altitude is not a relevant variable compared to and controlling for temperature and humidity. We know under what conditions different tick specie thrive versus die, and we know that as the years go on, there are far more areas under "tick-thriving" conditions for far longer periods, at least for the disease-carrying tick specie that we tend to care about. No one mentioned anything about climate change except you, reflexively and defensively, for some odd reason. |
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> No ticks at the altitude I reside. But with global warming it's slowly creeping up towards the towns further down.
I wasn't making any causal claims such as this ^