var arrayFacts = [

"<b>Blood Thirsty:</b><br><br>The tick is a blood thirsty parasite, which uses body heat and carbon dioxide to find mammals to bite.",

"<b>Blood Curdling Climbers:</b><br><br>By using their legs to climb up leaves, trees, and brush, Ticks can attach themselves to a host at least 3 feet above the earth.",

"<b>Ticked Off!</b><br><br>By using their tiny, nearly microscopic feet, ticks cling to the host.<br><br> For this reason, it is good to keep the lower body covered when you are in thick vegetation.",

"<b>A Few Bad Apples...</b><br><br>There are over 850 different species of ticks. While you usually hear about the dangerous kinds of ticks, the vast majority of ticks are not harmful to people. <br><br>Of the 850 different species of ticks, only 100 or so transmit diseases to animals and humans.",

"<b>Disgusting and Deadly:</b><br><br>Ticks can transmit multiple diseases from just one bite.",

"<b>Seven Deadly Ticks:</b><br><br>Roughly seven kinds of ticks transmit diseases in the United States.<br><br>These include brown dog ticks, lone star ticks, Rocky Mountain wood ticks, black-legged ticks, Western black-legged ticks, pacific coast ticks, and American dog ticks.",

"<b>The Ends Don't Justify the Means!</b><br><br>Ticks drink blood to make eggs. Blood contains a lot of protein and other nutrients, which ticks then use to reproduce."];
