AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how small mammals and fleas vary in response to environmental factors like rainfall and temperature in plague-prone areas of Uganda.
  • Results showed that certain host species (Arvicanthis niloticus and Crocidura spp.) increased in abundance during the plague season in high-risk areas, while domestic rats (Rattus rattus) did not.
  • The findings suggest that seasonal changes in small mammal populations, influenced by rainfall and crop harvesting, align with patterns of human plague outbreaks, reinforcing existing models of plague risk in the region.

Article Abstract

Background: The distribution of human plague risk is strongly associated with rainfall in the tropical plague foci of East Africa, but little is known about how the plague bacterium is maintained during periods between outbreaks or whether environmental drivers trigger these outbreaks. We collected small mammals and fleas over a two year period in the West Nile region of Uganda to examine how the ecological community varies seasonally in a region with areas of both high and low risk of human plague cases.

Methods: Seasonal changes in the small mammal and flea communities were examined along an elevation gradient to determine whether small mammal and flea populations exhibit differences in their response to seasonal fluctuations in precipitation, temperature, and crop harvests in areas within (above 1300 m) and outside (below 1300 m) of a model-defined plague focus.

Results: The abundance of two potential enzootic host species (Arvicanthis niloticus and Crocidura spp.) increased during the plague season within the plague focus, but did not show the same increase at lower elevations outside this focus. In contrast, the abundance of the domestic rat population (Rattus rattus) did not show significant seasonal fluctuations regardless of locality. Arvicanthis niloticus abundance was negatively associated with monthly precipitation at a six month lag and positively associated with current monthly temperatures, and Crocidura spp. abundance was positively associated with precipitation at a three month lag and negatively associated with current monthly temperatures. The abundance of A. niloticus and Crocidura spp. were both positively correlated with the harvest of millet and maize.

Conclusions: The association between the abundance of several small mammal species and rainfall is consistent with previous models of the timing of human plague cases in relation to precipitation in the West Nile region. The seasonal increase in the abundance of key potential host species within the plague focus, but not outside of this area, suggests that changes in small mammal abundance may create favorable conditions for epizootic transmission of Y. pestis which ultimately may increase risk of human cases in this region.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4297414PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13071-014-0616-1DOI Listing

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