Abstract

Rodents are known to be reservoir hosts for at least 60 zoonotic diseases and are known to play an important role in their transmission and spread in different ways. We sampled different rodent communities within and around human settlements in Northern Senegal, an area subjected to major environmental transformations associated with global changes. Herein, we conducted an epidemiological study on their bacterial communities. One hundred and seventy-one (171) invasive and native rodents were captured, 50 from outdoor trapping sites and 121 rodents from indoor habitats, consisting of five species. The DNA of thirteen pathogens was successfully screened on the rodents’ spleens. We found: 2.3% of spleens positive to Piroplasmida and amplified one which gave a potentially new species Candidatus “Theileria senegalensis”; 9.35% of Bartonella spp. and amplified 10, giving three genotypes; 3.5% of filariasis species; 18.12% of Anaplasmataceae species and amplified only 5, giving a new potential species Candidatus “Ehrlichia senegalensis”; 2.33% of Hepatozoon spp.; 3.5% of Kinetoplastidae spp.; and 15.2% of Borrelia spp. and amplified 8 belonging all to Borrelia crocidurae. Some of the species of pathogens carried by the rodents of our studied area may be unknown because most of those we have identified are new species. In one bacterial taxon, Anaplasma, a positive correlation between host body mass and infection was found. Overall, male and invasive rodents appeared less infected than female and native ones, respectively.

Highlights

  • Rodents represent the largest order of living mammals and have an almost worldwide distribution [1]

  • Among the small mammals caught, 171 spleen samples were considered in the current work, all belonging to rodents of the family Muridae: i) 50 rodents from outdoor trapping sites, including 15 Arvicanthis niloticus, 20 Gerbillus nigeriae, and 15 Taterillus sp

  • Two samples corresponded to Hepatozoon sp. closely related to those isolated from snakes in the north of Africa [35]: KC696569 found in M. erythroleucus and KC696565 that we found in A. niloticus

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Summary

Introduction

Rodents represent the largest order of living mammals (approximately 2277 known species belonging to 33 families, which is nearly 42% of the global mammalian biodiversity) and have an almost worldwide distribution (with the exception of the Antarctica and some islands) [1]. They are well adapted to a wide range of habitats [2] and undoubtedly represent the mammals that have most often accompanied humans in their global dispersal.

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