TICK
LIFE CYCLE
The life cycle of a tick can be classified into 4 stages.

Ticks
are relatives of spiders, scorpions, and mites. As such,
their survival is dependent on a host (i.e., they're parasites).
Specifically, ticks feed on an animal's blood or body fluids.
The deer tick (Ixodes scapularis in the East & Midwest,
and Ixodes pacificus in the West) goes through many
stages during its lifecycle, and feeds on different species
at each point.
Ticks
begin as eggs (stage 1) that
hatch into 6-legged larvae (stage
2).
Larvae
live and feed on animals (mice, deer, squirrels, livestock,
and any humans who enter the tick habitat) for about a week
before detaching then molting (shedding) anywhere from 1
week to 8 months later.
The
larvae then become 8-legged nymphs (stage
3). Nymphs feed on animals, engorge for 3 to 11 days,
detach, and molt about a month later (depending on the species
and environmental conditions).
Once
the nymph molts, it becomes an adult tick (male or female).
Ticks climb up grass and plants and hold their legs up "sensing"
and "looking" for their prey. Ticks are attracted
to their hosts by detecting carbon dioxide and heat through
special organs located on the first pair of the tick's legs
(Haller's organs). When a warm-blooded animal walks past,
the tick can crawl onto them and begins feeding. Ticks
insert their mouths, attach to their prey, and engorge themselves
with a blood meal (stage
4).
During feeding, tick saliva can get into the host's body
and blood stream. Any tick infected with Borrelia
burgdorferi can then inadvertently spread this bacteria
to the host.
Male
and female ticks usually mate while attached to the host.
A
few weeks later, the engorged female detaches from the host
and lays her eggs (1000 - 8000 eggs) on a leaf. A
tick usually lives a year before dying.

Actual
size
(L
to R) larva, nymph, adult male, adult female, engorged female