Kelly Oggenfuss hands me a pair of white coveralls like the ones she’s wearing and instructs me to tuck the cuffs of my pants inside my socks. We are going to a tick-infested woodland, and the white fabric will make it easier to detect and remove the crawling black creatures if they try to bite us. Oggenfuss is a biologist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, New York. She is part of a team of scientists searching for clues to why ticks—and the sometimes deadly diseases they carry—are spreading to new areas in the U.S.
Kelly Oggenfuss hands me a pair of white coveralls like the ones she’s wearing. She tells me to tuck the pants cuffs inside my socks. Oggenfuss is a biologist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, New York. We’re going to a woodland full of ticks. The white fabric will make it easier to see the crawling black creatures. Then we can remove them if they try to bite us. Ticks carry diseases that can be deadly. Now they’re spreading to new parts of the U.S. Oggenfuss is part of a team of scientists trying to find out why.