Oh gross! You just found green ticks on your dog. What do you do when you find these sneaky pests on your pup? Read this article first before you do anything. Dr. Jess will explain green ticks on dogs below:

What Is a Tick?
A tick is one type of parasite that is commonly found in the United States and all over the world. A parasite is a type of organism that takes it nourishment from a host organism, such as a dog.
They are a part of the arachnid class and can be classified into two different categories: hard ticks and soft ticks.
Ticks are considered ectoparasites, meaning that they live on the outside of their host’s body and do their damage from the outside, biting through skin layers to spread their diseases.
Ticks do this by feeding on the blood of their host, which must be an animal with blood, such as a mammal or bird.
Many times ticks are described as being engorged, meaning that they are very round and full of blood, occurring after feeding from their host animal.
Ticks have 4 main life stages that go in order from the egg stage, to the larval stage, the nymph stage, and finally, the adult stage, which is the stage that most of us think of when the word tick is mentioned.
Ticks range from 1mm to 5 or 6 mm depending on the species, age, and if they have had a blood meal recently or not. The larger and rounder that the tick is, the more likely it is engorged.
Which Ticks Are Green?
There are three species of ticks that are quite common in many parts of the country, that can look green to the human eye.
The American dog tick, the lone star tick, and the brown dog tick can look green in color or give off a green-hue when the adults are engorged with blood.

Where Are Green Ticks Found?
Ticks are found throughout the world. However, certain types of ticks live in certain areas or parts of the world.
Here In the U.S. the brown dog tick, the Lone star tick, and the American dog tick are all commonly seen throughout the country.
Where I live in the Southeastern United States, I see many American dog ticks, lone star ticks, and brown dog ticks on animals of all kinds, especially on dogs.
There are different times of the year, in specific seasons around the globe, where ticks seem to be more problematic than at other times.
This is because of the tick life cycle, as well as the seasonal migration/behavior patterns in certain wildlife, that may help spread ticks in certain seasons.
For instance, here in the U.S., deer are quite active in the Fall season, their natural mating season.
These same deer travel longer distances during this time of year, in search of a mate.
While on their longer travels through the woods and brush, they are more likely to come into contact with more ticks that are questing, than if they were traveling their normal amount outside of mating season.
This gives the tick more chances to hitch a ride on the deer, or more chances to take a blood meal.

How Do Ticks Find Dogs?
Ticks can latch onto dogs through multiple techniques. The most popular, is likely the easiest way for the tick too – getting the tick from outside in the tick’s environment.
Ticks will find a warm mammal’s body by sensing odors, body heat, vibrations, or extra moisture.
The dog gets close enough to the tick for the tick to either crawl on to, brush on to, or grab upon the dog, termed “questing”.
Questing occurs when the tick keeps certain arms free and ready to grasp at anything moving coming their way, with their other limbs grasping whatever they’re currently resting on – blade of grass for example.
These sneaky little buggers can crawl up a dog’s entire leg without them even knowing about it!
Another other way for a tick to hitch a ride on your dog is for something else, like another animal or even a human, to bring it inside, into your dog’s environment.
Either scenario is gross to think about, and both avenues can happen easier and faster than you likely think!
How Does Ticks Engorgement Work?
Ticks bite a dog’s skin. There is then an analgesic aspect to the tick’s saliva so that the dog doesn’t feel the tick bite into them. The saliva from the tick can numb the skin of the dog.
Once the tick has bitten the dog’s skin and broken through to reach bloodstream, the tick will feed on the blood of the dog.
This causes the abdominal area of the tick to swell as the tick feeds on more and more blood, also termed tick engorgement.
The tick will become larger and larger, the more blood that the tick takes from, or collects, from the dog that they are latched on to.
Once they are done feeding from the dog, they will let go and fall off of the dog.

How Do Green Tick Bites Affect Dogs?
Tick bites can affect dogs in different ways.
One way that a tick bite can affect a dog is the act of biting through the skin itself. Although small, the bite of a tick must penetrate the skin barrier in order for the tick to reach blood to feed off of.
Any time the skin membrane is penetrated through, there will be a downstream inflammatory reaction brought on by the dog’s body, in order to fix the damage.
This is a natural progression of steps that the body produces internally to keep the body safe. The entire process, from start to finish, is orchestrated by the dog’s immune system.
This immune system activity helps protect your dog from an infection from the tick bite as well as decrease the likelihood of unwanted inflammation!
Immune system cells will come swarming in to fight off invader cells and invader microorganisms.
The immune system will also build the blood clot, the eventual scab, and the eventual new skin too! How cool is that?!?
And speaking of the immune system fighting off invader cells and microorganisms, we can’t forget about another way that tick bites can affect dogs, through the spread of diseases.
Although the dog’s immune system is setup to fight off dangerous invaders such as foreign bacteria and viruses, it is not always foolproof.
There are many diseases out there, such as Lyme Disease, that dog’s can become infected with, that first come from a tick.
Therefore, we don’t want ticks around or near our dogs at all. This can be quite the bummer (such an understatement), as these little sneaky things can go undetected for so long.
How Do Green Ticks Transfer Diseases to Dogs?
Great question! I always love answering this one, because it’s so interesting to me.
Ticks transfer diseases from inside their bodies to other animals and humans quite easily.
These parasites do this extremely efficiently through biting the animal.
The bite of the infected tick contains saliva that is contaminated with certain diseases, such as the lyme disease bacteria, Borrelia burgdorferi.
Once bitten, the saliva carrying the microorganisms, travels through the animal’s bloodstream to other parts of the body.
From there, depending on the disease that the tick’s saliva was carrying, can go over and be swiftly transported throughout the animal’s body, thanks to a very efficient blood pumping system most animals we know, are equipped with.
What Diseases Can Green Ticks Spread to Dogs?
Ticks can spread multiple different diseases to many different types of mammals, with differing degrees of symptoms to them all.
1. Lyme Disease:
Lyme disease is a disease spread by specific species of tick, the black legged tick.
The culprit of this disease is a bacterium called a spirochete, a spiral-shaped bacterium, that passes from the tick to the host mammal when the tick is feeding from its host.
This spiral bacteria, Borrelia burgdorferi, goes into the host mammal’s bloodstream, allowing it access to the rest of the body [source].
The bacteria can then move on to cause signs and symptoms, commonly seen in dogs with Lyme disease.
Another oddity with these spiral-shaped bacteria, is that the mammal’s immune system has a hard time detecting the odd-shaped bacteria – it’s not used to spotting such a rare-shaped invader.
Therefore, the undetected microorganism can hang out in the body for long periods of time with out signs appearing.
Then, weeks or months after the initial infection, the body may recognize the invader and call the immune system to attack.
This is when the animal will see signs of Lyme Disease, such as joint soreness, lethargy, lymph node enlargement, and fevers of unknown origin.
2. Ehrlichiosis:
Ehrlichiosis or ehrlichia, is very common to Lyme disease in many ways.
Ehrlichia is also caused by a bacteria, a type known as a rickettsial bacterium, usually Ehrlichia canis, AKA E. canis.
The signs and symptoms for ehrlichia and extremely similar to those for Lyme disease as well, including leg and joint sore, fatigue, and fevers.
It is spread through tick bites as they feed off of their mammalian hosts, of which, the most common of these ticks doing the infecting, is the brown deer tick.
3. Anaplasmosis:
Anaplasmosis is transmitted to your dog from the blacklegged tick and the brown dog tick.
Just like the transfer of bacteria from the tick bite to the host mammal in Lyme disease and Ehrlichia, anaplasmosis occurs in the same general fashion – through the saliva in the tick’s bite.
Again, anaplasmosis has a very similar symptoms list like that of Lyme disease such as joint pain, lethargy, fever, etc.
4. Babesiosis:
The bacteria in the babesia disease, affects the dog’s red blood cells and is also transmitted through tick bite.
Some of the more common symptoms of canine babesiosis include fever, lethargy, decreased appetite, anemia due to affected red blood cells, and difficulty breathing.
5. Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever:
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, also known as RMSF for short, is yet another disease, spread by ticks. Again, the tick’s saliva is infected with a small type of bacteria called Rickettsia rickettsii.
This rickettsial bacterium can wreak havoc on the blood vessels of the host mammal, cause the spots that may be visual on the skin and internal organs of the affected host, hence the “spotted” portion of this disease.

Where Are Green Ticks Commonly Found On Dogs?
These tricky little guys can hide just about anywhere! Many species of ticks are quite small when young or before they have had a blood meal.
Once engorged, most ticks are slightly larger, but still can be quite hidden in dog hair, in cute skin wrinkles, and between wiggly toes and tails. Sometimes engorged ticks even pass as looking like a nipple!
Because they can be so tricky to spot, it is a good idea to check your dog for ticks on a daily basis and after playing outside.
Places where I see ticks more commonly is they head, more specifically the ears – what a safe place to hide out in!
Another place that I find ticks commonly is on the legs. This makes sense if your dog has been outside in the woods or tall grass, where a sweep of the legs can sweep up a hungry tick lingering close by. Don’t forget those feet and toes – a great place for ticks to hide out!
Another place I see ticks is the stomach and abdominal area. The belly is a more hidden place for a tick to hang out – but be careful – is that a tick, or is that a nipple?
One last place that I see ticks hanging out is the tail area. This is for the same reason as I mentioned earlier when discussing why ticks are found on a dog’s legs – it was sweeping by in the woods or tall grass and the tick decided to hitch a ride.
What To Do With a Green Tick on Dog:
This is one of the most common questions that I get when discussing ticks with my clients. What do you do if you find ticks on dogs?
- Firstly, search for more ticks! If there is one tick present, there very well may be friends of theirs joining the party. look close with a visual inspection as well as a feeling inspection, petting and palpating your pup all over, not forgetting their nooks and crannies – in the ears, facial wrinkles, under arms, and between their toes.
- Secondly, put on gloves and grab a tick removal product, such as the Tick Stick, the Tick Twister, the Tick Key, the Tick Tornado, that wrap themselves underneath the abdomen section of the tick and make it easier to remove the mouthpiece of the tick along with the rest of its body – something that a pair of scissors many times gets wrong.
- Expose the tick by spreading the hair surrounding the tick, to the sides. Use some rubbing alcohol or water to help part the hair and expose the parasite for best results.
- Use the tick removal product and slide it underneath the body of the tick that you can visualize. Pinch and apply soft, even upward pressure to slowly release the tick from the skin of your dog, making sure that you are pulling straight upward from the tick until the tick comes out.
- Very gently clean the area with a dog-safe antiseptic cleaning product.
- Place the tick in a sealable container with alcohol and toss away, making sure that the container is sealed up nice and tight so that the tick does not escape! Discard of the gloves and wash your hands.
Tick Removal Tools
Tools that may help you properly remove a tick from your dog:
Original Tick Key
You can even carry this tool with you wherever you go because it has a built-in ketring hole for your convenience. There a few different color sets for you to choose from as well.
ZenPet Tick Tornado
I have many clients who have purchased this product with positive results that it has helped them in removing the entire tick, including those hard-to-reach tick mouthparts.
TickCheck Tick Remover
I have had some past clients who have purchased this product with positive results that it has helped them in removing the entire tick, including those hard-to-reach tick mouthparts.
Tick Twister Tick Remover Set
This is a very affordable product that may help in removing the entire tick, including those hard-to-reach tick mouthparts.
After removing the green tick, cleaning the area, and disposing of the tick appropriately, continue to monitor your dog for symptoms discussed earlier in this article that may elude you to a tick-borne disease or infection.
Some of the more common symptoms that may indicate further investigation include fatigue, joint pain, fever, and lethargy, among other signs.

How to Remove Ticks on Dogs
A guide to help you step-by-step on how to remove a tick from your dog safely and properly.
Materials
- Rubbing alcohol
- Tick Tornado or Tick Stick
Tools
- sealable container with alcohol
- gloves
Instructions
- Firstly, search for more ticks! If there is one tick present, there very well may be friends of theirs joining the party. look close with a visual inspection as well as a feeling inspection, petting and palpating your pup all over, not forgetting their nooks and crannies - in the ears, facial wrinkles, under arms, and between their toes.
- Secondly, put on gloves and grab a tick removal product, such as the Tick Stick or the Tick TOrnado, that wrap themselves underneath the abdomen section of the tick and make it easier to remove the mouthpiece of the tick along with the rest of its body - something that a pair of scissors many times gets wrong.
- Expose the tick by spreading the hair surrounding the tick, to the sides. Use some rubbing alcohol or water to help part the hair and expose the parasite for best results.
- Use the tick removal product and slide it underneath the body of the tick that you can visualize. Pinch and apply soft, even upward pressure to slowly release the tick from the skin of your dog, making sure that you are pulling straight upward from the tick until the tick comes out.
- Very gently clean the area with a dog-safe antiseptic cleaning product.
- Place the tick in a sealable container with alcohol and toss away, making sure that the container is sealed up nice and tight so that the tick does not escape! Remove your gloves and wash your hands well.
Notes
Contact your veterinarian with any concerns about ticks on dogs before removal of any ticks themselves. Take pictures of the tick to send to your vet if there are lingering concerns. Watch for adverse reactions and signs of inflammation and infection of the tick bite site.
Green Ticks: Diagnostic Techniques:
Once you have found an green tick on your dog and contacted your veterinarian, you may decide that because of signs your dog is experiencing, that they should be medically evaluated.
Depending on many things, such as your dog’s overall health, the species of tick, and the signs that your dog is experiencing, will help your vet determine what types of diagnostic techniques should be conducted to guide them in your dog’s treatment plan.
Here are some of the more common tests that can be done to help diagnose a tick-borne disease in dogs:
- Bloodwork: This includes a complete blood count (also referred to as a ‘CBC‘) and chemistry tests (AKA a ‘chem panel‘) to evaluate organ function (ex. kidney, pancreas, liver, etc.) and blood-related issues like anemia and blood clotting conditions.
- Urinalysis (urine tests): to evaluate organ function.
- Antibody test: to identify if your dog has been exposed to the tick that causes a tick-borne disease
- PCR testing: can detect the pathogens in the bloodstream in the early stages of infection
- Electrolyte tests: to identify if your dog is dehydrated or has an electrolyte imbalance that needs to be treated
- Radiographs (x-rays): to help rule out joint pain caused by bone issues versus tick-borne disease.
- Fecal exam: to rule out intestinal parasites
- Physical Exam: Your veterinarian should throughly examine your dog for signs of tick exposure, including finding more ticks!
Green Ticks on Dog: Treatment Options
There are many different treatment types out there that your veterinarian may recommend.
These different recommendations depend on your dog’s health, age, etc., as well as the disease that they may be infected with, and what symptoms that your dog is expressing.
Much of the treatment options include symptomatic treatment, meaning that your veterinarian will treat or help stop the symptoms your dog is going through, not the underlying disease.
Symptomatic treatment, along with certain medications, some which are discussed below, are very common courses of treatment when it comes to tick bites.
There are many drugs available to help in certain tick bite cases.
For instance, a drug called imidocarb dipropionate can be used in dogs with babesiosis.
Doxycycline is very popular choice prescribed to dogs who are showing signs of lyme disease who have also tested positive for the disease.
For ehrlichia, doxycycline, minocycline, or tetracycline may be prescribed for your dog by your veterinarian.
There are other medications that can be prescribed by your local vet in order to help with your dog’s specific situation.
Please contact your veterinarian to see what you should do after finding a tick on your dog, and they can discuss with you which treatments and medications may be best for your pet.
Green Ticks on Dogs: Prevention Methods
Be sure to use a veterinarian-recommended tick preventive on your dog.
There are many different types and formulations for you and your veterinarian to choose from for your dog that will be most appropriate for their health, their lifestyle, and their likelihood of coming into contact with a tick.
There are many preventative medicines that you can administer to your dog to help prevent issues between ticks and your dog.
Some of these tick preventatives have a topical application, where you apply the liquid in between the shoulder blades along the lower part of the neck.
Other types of tick preventatives are oral, or taken by mouth.
Most of these preventatives are administered on a monthly basis.
Check with your veterinarian on which option is best for you and your dog.
Green Ticks on Dog: Final Thoughts
Green ticks are very common parasite to find on dogs here in the United States.
Ticks quest on dogs in order to feed off of their blood.
Ticks can transfer multiple different diseases in their saliva, that when they bite your dog, can be transferred to them.
Some of these diseases include lyme disease, anaplasmosis, Rocky Mountain spotted ever, ehrlichia, and babesiosis.
If you do find a tick on your dog, proper removal of the tick is a necessity.
Remember to take a picture of the tick and monitor your dog for adverse signs of disease, like lethargy, fever, and joint pain.
Contact your veterinarian with any concerns. If your dog needs to be seen by your local vet after tick bites, a treatment plan and then a preventative plan, should be in order.

bob
Tuesday 29th of November 2022
shittiest article on this subject. no photos to identify, borderline fear mongering.