Biological invasions in international seaports: a case study of exotic rodents in Cotonou

Archive ouverte

Badou, Sylvestre | Hima, Karmadine | Agbangla, Clément | Gauthier, Philippe | Missihoun, Antoine, A. | Houéménou, Gualbert | Loiseau, Anne | Brouat, Carine | Dobigny, Gauthier

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

All datasets used for this study are entirely deposited in the Small Mammal Collection at the IRD/CBGP (https://doi.org/10.15454/WWNUPO) as well as at URIB/LARBA/EPAC. The datasets are available upon request.. International audience. Black rat (Rattus rattus), brown rat (Rattus norvegicus), and house mouse (Mus musculus) are known to be among the most common anthropophilic rodent species in cities worldwide. These species are responsible for the destruction of domestic and industrial materials, considerable damage to food stocks as well as zoonotic pathogens circulation and transmission to humans and animals. These invasive species have disseminated in all continents following human-mediated exchanges, especially maritime transports. In particular, seaports appear as privileged rats and mice's entry points into new regions, thus making them international regulations' priorities for rodent surveillance and management. Yet, studies on seaport rodents are rare; in particular, investigations on their genetic structure are almost inexistent, thus precluding science-guided interventions. In order to fill such a gap, our study focused on the population genetics of R. rattus, R. norvegicus and M. musculus in the Autonomous Port of Cotonou, Benin. Nine different sites were surveyed for three years. In total, 366 R. rattus, 188 R. norvegicus and 244 M. musculus were genotyped using 18 microsatellites, 16 microsatellites and 17 microsatellites, respectively. Our results show very well-structured genetic clusters in all three species as well as limited impacts of rodent control campaigns. Using comparisons with genotypes from other European, Asian and African countries, we suggest for the first time that settlement of newly introduced individuals may be a rare event. Implications in terms of management units and control and monitoring are discussed.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Maritime international trade and bioinvasions: A three‐year long survey of small mammals in Autonomous Port of Cotonou, Benin

Archive ouverte | Badou, Sylvestre | CCSD

International audience. 1. International trade has been favouring the dissemination of a wide suite of invasive alien species. Upstream prevention through the monitoring of entry points is identified as an appropria...

Molecular prevalence, genetic characterization and patterns of Toxoplasma gondii infection in domestic small mammals from Cotonou, Benin. Prévalence moléculaire, caractérisation génétique et schémas d’infection par Toxoplasma gondii chez les petits mammifères domestiques de Cotonou, Bénin

Archive ouverte | Etougbétché, Jonas, R. | CCSD

This study is part of a long-term partnership between Cotonou Autonomous Seaport, the Polytechnic School of Abomey-Calavi, the French Institute of Research for Sustainable Development, and the Tropical Neurology Institute (Inserm ...

Rodent proliferation in urban and agricultural settings of sub-Saharan Africa. The dark side of synthetic chemical rodenticides. Prolifération de rongeurs dans les milieux urbains et agricoles d’Afrique subsaharienne. Le côté obscur des rodenticides chimiques de synthèse

Archive ouverte | Dalecky, Ambroise | CCSD

La version anglaise de cet article est disponible sur : https://www.jle.com/download/ers-332330-63228-proliferation_de_rongeurs_dans_les_milieux_urbains_et_agricoles_dafrique_subsaharienne._le_cote_obscur_des_rodenticides_chimiqu-...

Chargement des enrichissements...