Microhabitat Characteristics of Akodon montensis, a Reservoir for Hantavirus, and Hantaviral Seroprevalence in an Atlantic Forest Site in Eastern Paraguay

Hantaviruses may cause serious disease when transmitted to humans by their rodent hosts. Since their emergence in the Americas in 1993, there have been extensive efforts to understand the role of environmental factors on the presence of these viruses in their host rodent populations. HPS outbreaks h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of vector ecology 2009-06, Vol.34 (1), p.104-113
Hauptverfasser: Goodin, Douglas G, Paige, Robert, Owen, Robert D, Ghimire, Kabita, Koch, David E, Chu, Yong-Kyu, Jonsson, Colleen B
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container_end_page 113
container_issue 1
container_start_page 104
container_title Journal of vector ecology
container_volume 34
creator Goodin, Douglas G
Paige, Robert
Owen, Robert D
Ghimire, Kabita
Koch, David E
Chu, Yong-Kyu
Jonsson, Colleen B
description Hantaviruses may cause serious disease when transmitted to humans by their rodent hosts. Since their emergence in the Americas in 1993, there have been extensive efforts to understand the role of environmental factors on the presence of these viruses in their host rodent populations. HPS outbreaks have been linked to precipitation, but climatic factors alone have not been sufficient to predict the spatial-temporal dynamics of the environment-reservoir-virus system. Using a series of mark-recapture sampling sites located at the Mbaracayú Biosphere Reserve, an Atlantic Forest site in eastern Paraguay, we investigated the hypothesis that microhabitat might also influence the prevalence of Jaborá hantavirus within populations of its reservoir species, Akodon montensis. Seven trapping sessions were conducted during 2005–2006 at four sites chosen to capture variable microhabitat conditions within the study site. Analysis of microhabitat preferences showed that A. montensis preferred areas with little forest overstory and denser vegetation cover on and near the ground. Moreover, there was a significant difference in the microhabitat occupied by antibody-positive vs antibody-negative rodents, indicating that microhabitats with greater overstory cover may promote transmission and maintenance of hantavirus in A. montensis.
doi_str_mv 10.3376/038.034.0113
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subjects Akodon montensis
Animals
Antibodies, Viral - blood
Arvicolinae - physiology
Arvicolinae - virology
Atlantic Forest
Disease Reservoirs - virology
Ecosystem
Hantavirus
Hantavirus - immunology
Hantavirus Infections - veterinary
Hantavirus Infections - virology
microhabitat
Paraguay
Risk Factors
Seroepidemiologic Studies
Trees
title Microhabitat Characteristics of Akodon montensis, a Reservoir for Hantavirus, and Hantaviral Seroprevalence in an Atlantic Forest Site in Eastern Paraguay
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