Abstract
Norway and black rats (Rattus norvegicus and Rattus rattus) are among the most ubiquitous urban wildlife species and are the source of a number of zoonotic diseases responsible for significant human morbidity and mortality in cities around the world. Rodent ecology is a primary determinant of the dynamics of zoonotic pathogens in rodent populations and the risk of pathogen transmission to people, yet many studies of rat-associated zoonoses do not account for the ecological characteristics of urban rat populations. This hinders the development of an in-depth understanding of the ecology of rat-associated zoonoses, limits comparability among studies, and can lead to erroneous conclusions. We conducted a year-long trapping-removal study to describe the ecological characteristics of urban rat populations in an inner-city neighborhood of Vancouver, Canada. The study focused on factors that might influence the ecology of zoonotic pathogens in these populations and/or our understanding of that ecology. We found that rat population density varied remarkably over short geographical distances, which could explain observed spatial distributions of rat-associated zoonoses and have implications for sampling and data analysis during research and surveillance. Season appeared to influence rat population composition even within the urban environment, which could cause temporal variation in pathogen prevalence. Body mass and bite wounds, which are often used in epidemiologic analyses as simple proxies for age and aggression, were shown to be more complex than previously thought. Finally, we found that factors associated with trapping can determine the size and composition of sampled rat population, and thus influence inferences made about the source population. These findings may help guide future studies of rats and rat-associated zoonoses.
Highlights
Norway and black rats (Rattus norvegicus and Rattus rattus) are commensal rodents with a virtually worldwide distribution [1]
Infestations are problematic in urban settings because rats are the source of a number of zoonotic pathogens responsible for significant human morbidity and mortality in cities around the world [4], These pathogens include Leptospira interrogans, Rickettsia typhi, Yersinia pestis, Streptobacillus monilliformis, and Seoul hantavirus, among others [4]
Rodent ecology is a primary determinant of zoonotic pathogen dynamics in rodent populations and of the risk of pathogen transmission from rats and people [4,7]
Summary
Norway and black rats (Rattus norvegicus and Rattus rattus) are commensal rodents with a virtually worldwide distribution [1] They are highly adapted to coexisting with human populations, and are ubiquitous in the urban environment [1,2,3]. Many studies of ratassociated zoonoses (RAZ) do not account for the characteristics of rat populations during sampling or data analysis [8,9,10,11,12] This is problematic because it hinders the development of a comprehensive understanding of pathogen ecology in rat populations, prevents comparability and synthesis of results generated by different studies, and can lead to erroneous conclusions with regard to RAZ dynamics
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