Genetic structure of Rattus rattus populations in an endemic plague focus in Madagascar: implications for rodent surveillance and management

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Abstract

Background

Plague remains a major public health concern in Madagascar. In the Central Highlands, where the disease is still endemic, the black rat ( Rattus rattus ) is the main reservoir of the causative agent Yersinia pestis . Understanding its population dynamics and structure is therefore crucial to inform control strategies, as dispersal may greatly limit the effectiveness of local interventions during outbreaks. In such a context, this study aims at investigating the genetic diversity and temporal structure of R. rattus populations at a fine geographical scale.

Methodology/Principal findings

Sampling was conducted in six villages of the Ankazobe district, both inside houses and outside villages. A total of 480 individuals, captured in March - May 2019 and 2020, were genotyped at 17 microsatellite loci. Our results show that genetic diversity levels were relatively homogeneous among villages and years. However, subpopulations living outside villages displayed significantly higher genetic diversity and lower genetic differentiation levels than those from inside houses, indicating larger effective population sizes outside villages in the cultivated habitats. These findings suggest more restricted movement among rat subpopulations from the houses, and greater connectivity among subpopulations living outside villages. However, overall genetic differentiation was rather low, suggesting extensive dispersal of rats at the scale of the district, facilitating rapid recolonization after local control efforts.

Conclusion

An integrated approach combining flea control within houses together with measures to reduce human-rodent contact would thus appear more appropriate than rodent control only to limit plague transmission.

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