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Global Animal Guide

Where Do Blacklegged Ticks Live?

Quick answer

Blacklegged Ticks are native to North America. Deciduous forest and grassy edges of eastern and midwestern United States and southeastern Canada — expanding northward with climate warming.

By the Global Animal Guide editorial team Last reviewed How we research & review

Native range

Deciduous forest and grassy edges of eastern and midwestern United States and southeastern Canada — expanding northward with climate warming.

Continents and countries

Blacklegged Ticks occur across North America. Local populations depend on intact habitat, prey or food plants, and freedom from persecution.

Habitat types

Deciduous forests, leaf litter, and grassy edges of eastern North America provides shelter and feeding grounds. Seasonal movement may follow rains, prey migrations, or breeding cycles.

Range changes

Historic range may exceed current distribution. Habitat loss, hunting, and climate shifts continue to affect where blacklegged ticks persist today.

Sources

FAQs

Where do blacklegged ticks live in the wild?

Deciduous forest and grassy edges of eastern and midwestern United States and southeastern Canada — expanding northward with climate warming.

What habitat do blacklegged ticks prefer?

Deciduous forests, leaf litter, and grassy edges of eastern North America

Are blacklegged ticks found near humans?

Some populations overlap farmland or suburbs; always observe wild blacklegged ticks from a safe distance.

Which continents have blacklegged ticks?

North America.

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