Haller's organ
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Haller's organ is a complex sensory organ possessed by hard and soft ticks (Ixodidae and Argasidae).[1] Not found outside of Acari, it is proposed to function like the chemosensation of insect antennae, but is structurally different. Ticks, being obligate parasites, must find a host in order to survive. Bloodmeals are necessary for completion of the life cycle, including reproduction and ontogenetic development.[2] First described in 1881, it was named for its discoverer, Haller.[3] While Haller initially proposed it was involved in auditory sensation, this was rejected in favor of olfactory sensation by 1905.[3] This theory was supported by Lee's behavioral studies as early as 1948.[4]
Haller's organ is critical in both questing for hosts and mate seeing, detecting them via olfaction and the sensing of humidity, temperature, carbon dioxide, and pheromones.[2] A 2019 study showed that the Haller's organ of Amblyomma americanum and D. variabilis uses infrared detection to sense and move towards heat within the temperature ranges of its hosts.[5]

Haller's organ is a group of chemosensitive cells concentrated on the tarsus of the forelegs, which ticks wave in front of them as with insect antennae in an alternating up and down fashion, rather than using them for walking.[3] It is a minute cavity at the terminal segment of the first pair of a tick's legs (not the pedipalps). Each one is composed of a pit and a capsule, which contain sensory setae.