We investigated the effect of physiological state of adult ticks (Amblyomma hebraeum Koch; Acari: Ixodidae) on their responses to a CO2-enriched atmosphere. Ticks were exposed to CO2 or air in an experimental chamber; we measured the effects on questing, movement and latency (the time after exposure to CO2 or stir when ticks began questing or moving). This study confirmed the hypothesis that responsiveness to CO2 is enhanced during host-seeking periods of the life cycle and reduced at other times. Thus, whereas newly moulted ticks quested infrequently when exposed to CO2, questing increased over the 6 week period following moulting. Likewise, in 6 week old ticks, movement in CO2 was significantly greater than in air. When a partially fed female below approximately ten times its unfed weight is removed from a host, it reattaches if subsequently presented to another host. Such females quested vigorously in CO2 but not in air. When a partially fed female above approximately ten times its unfed weight is removed from a host, it usually does not subsequently reattach. Such females quested infrequently, there being no significant difference between air and CO2. Males removed from a host at any stage of feeding reattach readily when given the opportunity. They quested frequently, moved readily and the latency was very low in air or CO2. Exp Appl Acarol 22. 667-681 (C) 1998 Kluwer Academic Publishers.