BECAS
SERRANO Laura Soledad
artículos
Título:
Using fine-scale spatial genetics of Norway rats to improve control efforts and reduce leptospirosis risk in urban slum environments
Autor/es:
RICHARDSON, JONATHAN L.; BURAK, MARY K.; HERNANDEZ, CHRISTIAN; SHIRVELL, JAMES M.; MARIANI, CAROL; CARVALHO-PEREIRA, TICIANA S. A.; PERTILE, ARSINOÊ C.; PANTI-MAY, JESUS A.; PEDRA, GABRIEL G.; SERRANO, SOLEDAD; TAYLOR, JOSH; CARVALHO, MAYARA; RODRIGUES, GORETE; COSTA, FEDERICO; CHILDS, JAMES E.; KO, ALBERT I.; CACCONE, ADALGISA
Revista:
Evolutionary Applications
Editorial:
Wiley-Blackwell
Referencias:
Año: 2017 vol. 10 p. 323 - 337
ISSN:
1752-4563
Resumen:
The Norway rat (Rattus norvegicus) is a key pest species globally and responsible for seasonal outbreaks of the zoonotic bacterial disease leptospirosis in the tropics. The city of Salvador, Brazil, has seen recent and dramatic increases in human population residing in slums, where conditions foster high rat density and increasing leptospirosis infection rates. Intervention campaigns have been used to drastically reduce rat numbers. In planning these interventions, it is important to define the eradication units - the spatial scale at which rats constitute continuous populations and from where rats are likely recolonizing, post-intervention. To provide this information, we applied spatial genetic analyses to 706 rats collected across Salvador and genotyped at 16 microsatellite loci. We performed spatially explicit analyses and estimated migration levels to identify distinct genetic units and landscape features associated with genetic divergence at different spatial scales, ranging from valleys within a slum community to city-wide analyses. Clear genetic breaks exist between rats not only across Salvador but also between valleys of slums separated by