All warm blooded mammals that live in the wild can have ticks.
Animals like parasitic mites, ticks, and certain species of beetles and flies live on the surface of other animals. These animals rely on their host for food, shelter, and reproduction. They can be harmful to their host's health and survival.
Some examples of animals that live on the surface of other animals include certain species of mites, ticks, and parasitic insects. These organisms are known as ectoparasites because they live on the outside of their host's body, feeding off their blood or tissues. Examples include fleas, lice, and certain types of gnats.
The blood of animals.
Worms, fleas, ticks and other parasites
A tick is classified in the order parasitiformes and is a small arachnid. Ticks live on the blood of other animals.
Arachnids are animals like Spiders,ticks and different types of crabs so they live mostly on land since spider and ticks cant breath under water
Parasite. They live off of the blood of their host animals.
Ticks feed off of warm blooded animals, sometimes humans. ticks also feed on reptiles and they are not warm blodded animals
Yes, ticks can and do live in the desert.
they get them from other animals or whatever else they come in contact or close contact with. ticks i believe are like fleas and can jump great distances to get to the dog so just from being outside or around other animals, they can get them.Dogs get ticks from many places the most common that I know/heard of areforestscamp sitesgrassother tick infested dogs/animals that are pets& wild animalsplaces like:grassy and weedy area's in the spring and summer ONLY have many tics
A deer tick sucks blood from the deers back.
Ticks and mosquitoes. They very much harm other animals in the tundra