What to know about tick, Lyme season following a mild winter

FILE - These ticks were collected by South Street Veterinary Services in Pittsfield, Mass., May 15, 2017. Deer ticks are smaller than the common brown dog tick and can be vectors for Lyme Disease. Ticks will be more active than usual early in spring 2023, and that means Lyme disease and other tick-borne infections could spread earlier and in greater numbers than in a typical year. Ticks can transmit multiple diseases that sicken humans, and deer ticks, which spread Lyme, are a day-to-day fact of life in the warm months in New England and the Midwest. (Ben Garver/The Berkshire Eagle via AP, File)

PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — After a mild winter in the U.S., will there be an uptick in ticks this year?

Researchers say it is hard to predict how the tick season will play out. This year’s mild winter and early snow melt, though, could mean more ticks earlier than usual and a wider spread of Lyme disease and other tick-borne diseases, scientists said.

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