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Dr. Richard S. Ostfeld

Disease Ecologist | PhD, University of California, Berkeley

Expertise
disease ecology, Lyme disease, West Nile virus

845 677-7600 x136

Richard Ostfeld studies the ecology of Lyme and other tick-borne diseases such as Powassan viral encephalitis, Babesiosis, and Anaplasmosis. By understanding the factors that influence tick abundance and infection, Ostfeld and his team can predict when and where exposure to tick-borne diseases will be high.

Ostfeld and his Bard College collaborator Felicia Keesing direct The Tick Project – a five-year study that is testing two tick control methods in residential neighborhoods throughout Dutchess County, NY. The goal: devise an effective approach to controlling tick-borne diseases that could be adopted by local municipalities, community groups, and neighborhoods. Changing climatic conditions can affect tick survival and reproduction.

Ostfeld studies the effects of environmental variables on tick survival, behavior, and population performance to predict where Lyme disease will spread as the climate warms. Ostfeld’s team is also investigating the communities of viruses that live within blacklegged ticks and an important host, the white-footed mouse. They are determining what viruses ticks and mice carry, the mechanisms by which these viruses are transmitted, and whether they could cause illness in humans.

Ostfeld has studied the relationship between land use and infectious disease for over 20 years. Development of forested areas can degrade or fragment wildlife habitat, causing species diversity to decline. Predators like foxes and owls, which feed on mice, are sensitive to fragmentation. The loss of predators can lead to more mice and fewer non-mouse hosts for ticks, increasing the abundance of Lyme-infected ticks and disease risk for humans.

Kumar, D, LP Downs, A Adegoke, E Machtinger, K. Oggenfuss, Richard S. Ostfeld, M Embers, and S Karim. (2024) 2022. “An Exploratory Study on the Microbiome of Northern and Southern Populations of Ixodes Scapularis Ticks Predicts Changes and Unique Bacterial Interactions”. PATHOGENS 11 (2). doi:10.3390/pathogens11020130.
Keesing, Felicia, Stacy Mowry, William Bremer, Shannon Duerr, Andrew S. Evans, Ilya R. Fischhoff, Alison F. Hinckley, et al. 2022. “Effects of Tick-Control Interventions on Tick Abundance, Human Encounters With Ticks, and Incidence of Tickborne Diseases in Residential Neighborhoods, New York, USA”. Emerging Infectious Diseases 28 (5). Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC): 957-66. doi:10.3201/eid2805.211146.
Ecke, Frauke, Barbara A. Han, Birger Hörnfeldt, Hussein Khalil, Magnus Magnusson, Navinder J. Singh, and Richard S. Ostfeld. 2022. “Population Fluctuations and Synanthropy Explain Transmission Risk in Rodent-Borne Zoonoses”. Nature Communications 13 (1). Springer Science and Business Media LLC. doi:10.1038/s41467-022-35273-7.
Mowry, Stacy, Jennifer Pendleton, Felicia Keesing, Marissa Teator, and Richard S. Ostfeld. 2022. “Estimates of Wildlife Species Richness, Occupancy, and Habitat Preference in a Residential Landscape in New York State”. Urban Ecosystems. Springer Science and Business Media LLC. doi:10.1007/s11252-022-01318-4.
Vannier, Edouard, Luciana M Richer, Duy M Dinh, Dustin Brisson, Richard S. Ostfeld, and Maria Gomes-Solecki. 2022. “Deployment of a Reservoir-Targeted Vaccine Against Borrelia Burgdorferi Reduces the Prevalence of Babesia Microti Coinfection in Ixodes Scapularis Ticks”. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, jiac462+. doi:10.1093/infdis/jiac462.
Heske, Edward J, Richard S. Ostfeld, Sergio Ticul Álvarez-Castañeda, Barry J Fox, and William F Laurance. 2022. “Obituary: Dr. William Z. Lidicker, Jr. (1932–2022)”. Journal of Mammalogy, gyac109+. doi:10.1093/jmammal/gyac109.
Ostfeld, Richard S., and Felicia Keesing. 2022. “The Ecology of Infectious Diseases: An Homage to Multi-Factor Perspectives”. Therya 13: 39-44,. doi:10.12933/therya-22-1183.
Vila, Montserrat, Alison M Dunn, Franz Essl, Elena Gomez-Diaz, Philip E Hulme, Jonathan M Jeschke, MartÍn A Nunez, et al. 2021. “Viewing Emerging Human Infectious Epidemics through the Lens of Invasion Biology”. BioScience. Oxford University Press (OUP). doi:10.1093/biosci/biab047.
Heaney, Christopher D., Katherine A. Moon, Richard S. Ostfeld, Jonathan Pollak, Melissa N. Poulsen, Annemarie G. Hirsch, Joseph DeWalle, John N. Aucott, and Brian S. Schwartz. 2021. “Relations of Peri-Residential Temperature and Humidity in Tick-Life-Cycle-Relevant Time Periods With Human Lyme Disease Risk in Pennsylvania, USA”. Science of The Total Environment 795. Elsevier BV: 148697. doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.148697.
Aristizabal-Henao, Juan J., Hannah Brown, Emily K. Griffin, Richard S. Ostfeld, K. Oggenfuss, Brandon M. Parker, Samantha M. Wisely, and John A. Bowden. 2021. “Ticks As Novel Sentinels to Monitor Environmental Levels of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS)”. Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts. Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC). doi:10.1039/d1em00209k.

Current Projects


Books


ecology of lyme disease

Lyme Disease: The Ecology of a Complex System
Oxford University Press, 2011

ostfeld book

Infectious Disease Ecology: Effects of Ecosystems on Disease and of Disease on Ecosystems
Princeton University Press, 2008