This project, run by the Marshfield Clinic Research Institute, asks citizen scientists to help us study ticks and the diseases they carry in Wisconsin. Look for boxes of kits in our community to participate. Take a kit home, and next time you find a tick, place it in collection tube inside the kit. Fill out the survey either online or in the kit, and return the kit to us by mailing it via USPS. When we receive your tick, we’ll identify its species and add it to our map. Use the unique ID included in your kit to look up your tick in the search box on this page.
July 2024 NewsletterWe’ll also use your tick to study the tick microbiome and how that influences a tick’s ability to carry disease. However, we won’t be able to tell you if your tick was carrying a disease. If you have been bitten by a tick, monitor yourself for rash, fever, new muscle and joint pain, and new fatigue for 30 days. If any of these symptoms occur, contact your healthcare provider immediately. Consider contacting a healthcare provider right away to see if a single dose of antibiotics may be appropriate to help prevent disease.
Got more questions?
Email us at tics@marshfieldclinic.org, call at 1-715-389-7796 (extension 16462), and be sure to check out these other tick and tickborne disease resources in our area:
TICK ID | TICK SPECIES | DATE COLLECTED |
---|---|---|
0022 | 05-06-2025 | |
0048 | 05-06-2025 | |
0496 | 05-05-2025 | |
0683 | 05-24-2025 | |
TIC 5895 | 04-27-2025 | |
TIC-3704 | 04-10-2025 | |
TIC-3707 | 04-26-2025 | |
TIC-4021-01 | American dog (wood) tick | 05-10-2025 |
TIC-4021-02 | Deer (blacklegged) tick | 05-10-2025 |
TIC-4021-03 | American dog (wood) tick | 05-10-2025 |
TICK SPECIES | COUNT |
---|---|
9 | |
American dog (wood) tick | 375 |
Deer (blacklegged) tick | 664 |