Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health

Man shares crops and a number of parasites with rodents. Every environmental modification and change in human activities can lead to an increased risk of rodent outbreaks. Some biological processes that determine rodent populations and outbreaks are now better known (Figure 1). This concerns three k...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Delattre, Pierre, Duplantier, Jean-Marc, Fichet-Calvet, Élisabeth, Giraudoux, Patrick
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:French
Published: Cirad 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revues.cirad.fr/index.php/cahiers-agricultures/article/view/30099
id ftciradojs:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/30099
record_format openpolar
spelling ftciradojs:oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article/30099 2023-05-15T15:56:32+02:00 Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health Pullulation de rongeurs, agriculture et santé publique Delattre, Pierre Duplantier, Jean-Marc Fichet-Calvet, Élisabeth Giraudoux, Patrick 1998-07-01 application/pdf https://revues.cirad.fr/index.php/cahiers-agricultures/article/view/30099 fra fre Cirad https://revues.cirad.fr/index.php/cahiers-agricultures/article/view/30099/29859 https://revues.cirad.fr/index.php/cahiers-agricultures/article/view/30099 (c) Tous droits réservés CIRAD 2014 @Cirad Cahiers Agricultures; Vol. 7 No. 4 (1998); 285-298 (1) Cahiers Agricultures; Vol. 7 Núm. 4 (1998); 285-298 (1) Cahiers Agricultures; Vol. 7 No 4 (1998); 285-298 (1) 1777-5949 1166-7699 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article évalué par les pairs 1998 ftciradojs 2022-08-25T06:14:07Z Man shares crops and a number of parasites with rodents. Every environmental modification and change in human activities can lead to an increased risk of rodent outbreaks. Some biological processes that determine rodent populations and outbreaks are now better known (Figure 1). This concerns three kinds of environmental modification: (i) those resulting from the extension of habitats favourable to some species, (ii) those resulting from landscape homogenization (with or without extension of favourable habitats), (iii) those resulting from the creation of new habitats favourable to species already present or to species with a high adaptive capacity and high colonization potential. Several examples of rodent outbreaks due to such modifications are reported. Outbreaks of grassland rodents in France illustrate the effects of land composition at different scales. This provides a framework for assessing outbreak risks at the regional scale (Figure 2). At a more local scale, e.g. the commune, heterogeneity due to hedgerow networks or woody mosaics significantly decreases the extent of density variations (Figure 3). Furthermore, landscape homogeneization induces greater extension of outbreaks (Figures 4, 5 and 6). Some rodent species are cyclical. In grassland landscapes of Franche-Comté, in eastern France, these cycles last 3-4 years for the common vole, and 5-6 years for the fossorial water vole. Density variations for forest rodents of similar size in this region show a synchronicity trend with respect to grassland rodent cycles (Figure 7). In northeastern France, outbreaks of forest rodents induce regular epidemics of haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (Figure 8). Suitable studies should be carried out to check whether these epidemic outbreaks are linked with grassland rodent dynamics, as already demonstrated in the Franche-Comté grassland landscape. Moreover, the time-lag between the cycles of common vole and of fossorial water vole (two species of different size) provides favourable conditions for maintaining ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Common vole CIRAD Revela - Journals in open access
institution Open Polar
collection CIRAD Revela - Journals in open access
op_collection_id ftciradojs
language French
description Man shares crops and a number of parasites with rodents. Every environmental modification and change in human activities can lead to an increased risk of rodent outbreaks. Some biological processes that determine rodent populations and outbreaks are now better known (Figure 1). This concerns three kinds of environmental modification: (i) those resulting from the extension of habitats favourable to some species, (ii) those resulting from landscape homogenization (with or without extension of favourable habitats), (iii) those resulting from the creation of new habitats favourable to species already present or to species with a high adaptive capacity and high colonization potential. Several examples of rodent outbreaks due to such modifications are reported. Outbreaks of grassland rodents in France illustrate the effects of land composition at different scales. This provides a framework for assessing outbreak risks at the regional scale (Figure 2). At a more local scale, e.g. the commune, heterogeneity due to hedgerow networks or woody mosaics significantly decreases the extent of density variations (Figure 3). Furthermore, landscape homogeneization induces greater extension of outbreaks (Figures 4, 5 and 6). Some rodent species are cyclical. In grassland landscapes of Franche-Comté, in eastern France, these cycles last 3-4 years for the common vole, and 5-6 years for the fossorial water vole. Density variations for forest rodents of similar size in this region show a synchronicity trend with respect to grassland rodent cycles (Figure 7). In northeastern France, outbreaks of forest rodents induce regular epidemics of haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (Figure 8). Suitable studies should be carried out to check whether these epidemic outbreaks are linked with grassland rodent dynamics, as already demonstrated in the Franche-Comté grassland landscape. Moreover, the time-lag between the cycles of common vole and of fossorial water vole (two species of different size) provides favourable conditions for maintaining ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Delattre, Pierre
Duplantier, Jean-Marc
Fichet-Calvet, Élisabeth
Giraudoux, Patrick
spellingShingle Delattre, Pierre
Duplantier, Jean-Marc
Fichet-Calvet, Élisabeth
Giraudoux, Patrick
Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health
author_facet Delattre, Pierre
Duplantier, Jean-Marc
Fichet-Calvet, Élisabeth
Giraudoux, Patrick
author_sort Delattre, Pierre
title Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health
title_short Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health
title_full Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health
title_fullStr Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health
title_full_unstemmed Environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health
title_sort environmental modifications and rodent outbreaks: impact on agriculture and public health
publisher Cirad
publishDate 1998
url https://revues.cirad.fr/index.php/cahiers-agricultures/article/view/30099
genre Common vole
genre_facet Common vole
op_source Cahiers Agricultures; Vol. 7 No. 4 (1998); 285-298 (1)
Cahiers Agricultures; Vol. 7 Núm. 4 (1998); 285-298 (1)
Cahiers Agricultures; Vol. 7 No 4 (1998); 285-298 (1)
1777-5949
1166-7699
op_relation https://revues.cirad.fr/index.php/cahiers-agricultures/article/view/30099/29859
https://revues.cirad.fr/index.php/cahiers-agricultures/article/view/30099
op_rights (c) Tous droits réservés CIRAD 2014
@Cirad
_version_ 1766391945760866304