Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities

Changes in host-parasite ecological interactions during biological invasion events may affect both the outcome of invasions and the dynamics of exotic and/or endemic infections. We tested these hypotheses, by investigating ongoing house mouse (Mus musculus domesticus) and black rat (Rattus rattus) i...

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Main Authors: Diagne, C., Galan, M., Tamisier, L., d'Ambrosio, J., /Dalecky, Ambroise, Ba, K., Kane, M., Niang, Y., Diallo, M., Sow, A., /Gauthier, Philippe, Tatard, C., Loiseau, A., Piry, S., Sembene, M., Cosson, J. F., Charbonnel, N., /Brouat, Carine
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010071346
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spelling ftird:oai:ird.fr:fdi:010071346 2024-09-15T18:32:04+00:00 Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities Diagne, C. Galan, M. Tamisier, L. d'Ambrosio, J. /Dalecky, Ambroise Ba, K. Kane, M. Niang, Y. Diallo, M. Sow, A. /Gauthier, Philippe Tatard, C. Loiseau, A. Piry, S. Sembene, M. Cosson, J. F. Charbonnel, N. /Brouat, Carine SENEGAL 2017 https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010071346 EN eng https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010071346 oai:ird.fr:fdi:010071346 Diagne C., Galan M., Tamisier L., d'Ambrosio J., Dalecky Ambroise, Ba K., Kane M., Niang Y., Diallo M., Sow A., Gauthier Philippe, Tatard C., Loiseau A., Piry S., Sembene M., Cosson J. F., Charbonnel N., Brouat Carine. Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities. 2017, 7, p. art. 14995 [11 p.] text 2017 ftird 2024-08-15T05:57:41Z Changes in host-parasite ecological interactions during biological invasion events may affect both the outcome of invasions and the dynamics of exotic and/or endemic infections. We tested these hypotheses, by investigating ongoing house mouse (Mus musculus domesticus) and black rat (Rattus rattus) invasions in Senegal (West Africa). We used a 16S gene rRNA amplicon sequencing approach to study potentially zoonotic bacterial communities in invasive and native rodents sampled along two well-defined independent invasion routes. We found that individual host factors (body mass and sex) were important drivers of these bacterial infections in rodents. We observed that the bacterial communities varied along invasion routes and differed between invasive and native rodents, with native rodents displaying higher overall bacterial diversity than invasive rodents. Differences in prevalence levels for some bacterial Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) provided support for ecological processes connecting parasitism and invasion success. Finally, our results indicated that rodent invasions may lead to the introduction of exotic bacterial genera and/or to changes in the prevalence of endemic ones. This study illustrates the difficulty of predicting the relationship between biodiversity and disease risks, and advocate for public health prevention strategies based on global pathogen surveillance followed by accurate characterization of potential zoonotic agents. Text Rattus rattus IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
institution Open Polar
collection IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon
op_collection_id ftird
language English
description Changes in host-parasite ecological interactions during biological invasion events may affect both the outcome of invasions and the dynamics of exotic and/or endemic infections. We tested these hypotheses, by investigating ongoing house mouse (Mus musculus domesticus) and black rat (Rattus rattus) invasions in Senegal (West Africa). We used a 16S gene rRNA amplicon sequencing approach to study potentially zoonotic bacterial communities in invasive and native rodents sampled along two well-defined independent invasion routes. We found that individual host factors (body mass and sex) were important drivers of these bacterial infections in rodents. We observed that the bacterial communities varied along invasion routes and differed between invasive and native rodents, with native rodents displaying higher overall bacterial diversity than invasive rodents. Differences in prevalence levels for some bacterial Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) provided support for ecological processes connecting parasitism and invasion success. Finally, our results indicated that rodent invasions may lead to the introduction of exotic bacterial genera and/or to changes in the prevalence of endemic ones. This study illustrates the difficulty of predicting the relationship between biodiversity and disease risks, and advocate for public health prevention strategies based on global pathogen surveillance followed by accurate characterization of potential zoonotic agents.
format Text
author Diagne, C.
Galan, M.
Tamisier, L.
d'Ambrosio, J.
/Dalecky, Ambroise
Ba, K.
Kane, M.
Niang, Y.
Diallo, M.
Sow, A.
/Gauthier, Philippe
Tatard, C.
Loiseau, A.
Piry, S.
Sembene, M.
Cosson, J. F.
Charbonnel, N.
/Brouat, Carine
spellingShingle Diagne, C.
Galan, M.
Tamisier, L.
d'Ambrosio, J.
/Dalecky, Ambroise
Ba, K.
Kane, M.
Niang, Y.
Diallo, M.
Sow, A.
/Gauthier, Philippe
Tatard, C.
Loiseau, A.
Piry, S.
Sembene, M.
Cosson, J. F.
Charbonnel, N.
/Brouat, Carine
Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities
author_facet Diagne, C.
Galan, M.
Tamisier, L.
d'Ambrosio, J.
/Dalecky, Ambroise
Ba, K.
Kane, M.
Niang, Y.
Diallo, M.
Sow, A.
/Gauthier, Philippe
Tatard, C.
Loiseau, A.
Piry, S.
Sembene, M.
Cosson, J. F.
Charbonnel, N.
/Brouat, Carine
author_sort Diagne, C.
title Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities
title_short Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities
title_full Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities
title_fullStr Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities
title_full_unstemmed Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities
title_sort ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in african commensal rodent communities
publishDate 2017
url https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010071346
op_coverage SENEGAL
genre Rattus rattus
genre_facet Rattus rattus
op_relation https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010071346
oai:ird.fr:fdi:010071346
Diagne C., Galan M., Tamisier L., d'Ambrosio J., Dalecky Ambroise, Ba K., Kane M., Niang Y., Diallo M., Sow A., Gauthier Philippe, Tatard C., Loiseau A., Piry S., Sembene M., Cosson J. F., Charbonnel N., Brouat Carine. Ecological and sanitary impacts of bacterial communities associated to biological invasions in African commensal rodent communities. 2017, 7, p. art. 14995 [11 p.]
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