What leg count characterizes both the Nymph and Adult stages of the wood tick?
Answer
Eight legs
The transition from the larval stage to the nymphal stage involves a significant morphological change in the wood tick's structure concerning locomotion. Once the tick molts out of the larval phase, it gains two additional pairs of legs. This means both the nymphal stage and the final adult stage possess a total of eight legs. Consequently, finding an eight-legged tick indicates it is no longer in the initial larval phase but is either a nymph or a fully mature adult specimen.

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