Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015

As part of projects aimed at studying 1) the role of invasive black rat populations in the emergence of zoonotic diseases in Southeastern Senegal, and 2), the evolutionary consequences of parasites in R. rattus and M. musculus invasions in Senegal, we conducted a series of field campaigns throughout...

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Main Authors: Granjon, Laurent, Fossati, Odile
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: DataSuds 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.23708/pqtqda
https://dataverse.ird.fr/citation?persistentId=doi:10.23708/PQTQDA
id ftdatacite:10.23708/pqtqda
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.23708/pqtqda 2023-05-15T18:05:33+02:00 Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015 Granjon, Laurent Fossati, Odile 2020 https://dx.doi.org/10.23708/pqtqda https://dataverse.ird.fr/citation?persistentId=doi:10.23708/PQTQDA unknown DataSuds dataset Dataset 2020 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.23708/pqtqda 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z As part of projects aimed at studying 1) the role of invasive black rat populations in the emergence of zoonotic diseases in Southeastern Senegal, and 2), the evolutionary consequences of parasites in R. rattus and M. musculus invasions in Senegal, we conducted a series of field campaigns throughout the southern part of the country, between May 2012 and September 2015. The objective was to catch commensal (= indoor) small mammals using standard trapping procedures, identify them using morphological or, if needed, molecular tools, and take a number of samples from them upon autopsy, to look for zoonotic parasites and pathogens. Along with data on individual specimens, information on microhabitat were gathered at each trap position. This resulted in the constitution of a dataset of more than 13.000 trapnights, which allowed the capture of 3166 small mammals, all characterized by a series of associated biological, geographical and environmental data. The small mammals concerned are mainly rodents (10 species), and a few species of shrews and hedgehogs. The two invasive rodent species (the domestic mouse Mus musculus domesticus and the black rat Rattus rattus) were the most numerous, exceeding in numbers all the other species pooled. This dataset makes it possible to study coarse to fine-scaled distribution of species of this small mammal commensal community in the southern part of Senegal, as well as the possible determinants of this distribution in terms of habitat preferences and / or interspecific interactions. Combined with data obtained through the treatment of associated biological samples (population genetics, parasite loads, pathogen prevalence…) they make it possible to precise the epidemiological context surrounding zoonotic diseases in which these small mammal species act as reservoirs or vectors. Dataset Rattus rattus DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
description As part of projects aimed at studying 1) the role of invasive black rat populations in the emergence of zoonotic diseases in Southeastern Senegal, and 2), the evolutionary consequences of parasites in R. rattus and M. musculus invasions in Senegal, we conducted a series of field campaigns throughout the southern part of the country, between May 2012 and September 2015. The objective was to catch commensal (= indoor) small mammals using standard trapping procedures, identify them using morphological or, if needed, molecular tools, and take a number of samples from them upon autopsy, to look for zoonotic parasites and pathogens. Along with data on individual specimens, information on microhabitat were gathered at each trap position. This resulted in the constitution of a dataset of more than 13.000 trapnights, which allowed the capture of 3166 small mammals, all characterized by a series of associated biological, geographical and environmental data. The small mammals concerned are mainly rodents (10 species), and a few species of shrews and hedgehogs. The two invasive rodent species (the domestic mouse Mus musculus domesticus and the black rat Rattus rattus) were the most numerous, exceeding in numbers all the other species pooled. This dataset makes it possible to study coarse to fine-scaled distribution of species of this small mammal commensal community in the southern part of Senegal, as well as the possible determinants of this distribution in terms of habitat preferences and / or interspecific interactions. Combined with data obtained through the treatment of associated biological samples (population genetics, parasite loads, pathogen prevalence…) they make it possible to precise the epidemiological context surrounding zoonotic diseases in which these small mammal species act as reservoirs or vectors.
format Dataset
author Granjon, Laurent
Fossati, Odile
spellingShingle Granjon, Laurent
Fossati, Odile
Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015
author_facet Granjon, Laurent
Fossati, Odile
author_sort Granjon, Laurent
title Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015
title_short Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015
title_full Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015
title_fullStr Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015
title_full_unstemmed Commensal small mammal trapping data in Southern Senegal, 2012-2015
title_sort commensal small mammal trapping data in southern senegal, 2012-2015
publisher DataSuds
publishDate 2020
url https://dx.doi.org/10.23708/pqtqda
https://dataverse.ird.fr/citation?persistentId=doi:10.23708/PQTQDA
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_doi https://doi.org/10.23708/pqtqda
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