Abstract. The maintenance of Borrelia burgdorferi in a population of Peromyscus leucopus was investigated from 202 mark and recapture mice and 61 mice that were removed from a site in Baltimore County, Maryland. Borrelia burgdorferi infection was detected by culture and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of ear tissue, and exposure to the spirochete was quantified by serology. Overall prevalence of B. burgdorferi, as determined by culture and PCR of ear tissue at first capture, was 25% in the longitudinal sample and 42% in the cross-sectional sample. Significantly more juvenile mice were captured in the longitudinal sample (18%) than in the cross-sectional sample (0%). Among 36 captured juvenile mice, only one was infected with B. burgdorferi; this contributed to a significant trend for infection with B. burgdorferi with age. Recovery from infection with B. burgdorferi was not detected among 77 mice followed for an average of 160 days. The incidence rate of infection with B. burgdorferi was 10 times greater in mice captured during two periods of high risk of exposure to nymphal Ixodes scapularis ticks compared with a period of low risk. Maintenance of B. burgdorferi in this population was dependent on indirect transmission of the organism from infected ticks to susceptible mice and development of chronic infection with the spirochete, which had no measurable effect on the survival of infected mice.Since Lyme disease was first described in 1977, 1 it has become the most commonly reported vector-borne disease in the United States. 2 The disease, which is caused by the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi, 3,4 is transmitted to humans by the bite of an Ixodid tick: Ixodes scapularis in the eastern and northcentral parts of the United States (I. dammini 5 as synonymized by Oliver and others 6 ) and I. pacificus 7,8 in the western United States. An enzootic cycle involving vertebrate hosts and ticks is critical for the maintenance of the spirochete in Lyme disease enzootic areas in the eastern and mid-central parts of the United States because the rate of transovarial transmission of the spirochete in I. scapularis is extremely low. 9 Transovarial transmission of B. burgdorferi in I. pacificus has been demonstrated; 10 however, on the west coast of the United States the relative importance of ticks and vertebrate animals in the maintenance of B. burgdorferi remains unclear.Although B. burgdorferi has been isolated from a wide variety of mammalian and avian hosts in the eastern and northcentral parts of the United States, 11,12 only white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus), 13,14 chipmunks (Tamias striatus) and meadow voles (Microtus pennsylvanicus), 15 skunks (Mephitis mephitis) and raccoons (Procyon lotor), 16 and Norway rats (Rattus norvegicus) 17 have been shown to be competent reservoir hosts of B. burgdorferi in enzootic cycles of the organism in those areas. White-footed mice, in comparison with meadow voles and chipmunks 15 and skunks and raccoons, 16 are generally recognized in these areas as the most important reserv...