INVESTIGADORES
PIÑA Carlos Ignacio
artículos
Título:
Orthohantavirus Infection in Two Rodent Species that Inhabit Wetlands in Argentina
Autor/es:
MAROLI, MALENA; BELLOMO, CARLA M.; COELHO, ROCÍO M.; MARTINEZ, VALERIA P.; PIÑA, CARLOS I.; GÓMEZ VILLAFAÑE, ISABEL E.
Revista:
ECOHEALTH
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Lugar: Berlin; Año: 2023
ISSN:
1612-9202
Resumen:
Previous research conducted in central-east region of Argentina recorded potential orthohantavirus host rodents in diverse environments, but no research has focused particularly on islands, the environments that present the greatest risk to humans. For this reason, the aims of this research were to determine the orthohantavirus host in the rodent community focused on islands of Parana´ RiverDelta, central-east region of Argentina, to identify temporal and spatial factors associated with orthohantavirus prevalence variations, to compare the functional traits of seropositive and seronegative rodents, and to explore the association between orthohantavirus prevalence and rodent community characteristics between August 2014 and May 2018. With a trapping effort of 14,600 trap-nights, a total of 348 sigmodontine rodent specimens belonging to seven species were captured 361 times. The overall antibody prevalence was 4.9%. Particularly, 14.9% of Oligoryzomys flavescens and 1.5% of Oxymycterus rufus, mainly reproductively active adult males, had antibodies against orthohantavirus. Even though O. flavescens inhabit all islands, our results suggest spatial heterogeneity in the viral distribution, with two months after periods of low temperature presenting increases in seroprevalence. This could be a response to the increased proportion of adults present in the rodent population. In addition, an association was found between the high seroprevalence and the diversity of the rodent assemblage.We also found 1.5% of O. rufus exposed to orthohantavirus, which shows us that further investigation of the ecology of the virus is needed to answer whether this species act as a spillover or a new competent host.